Holes by Louis Sachar PDF Download Book

Holes by Louis Sachar PDF

Features of Holes by Louis Sachar PDF

Holes by Louis Sachar PDF -Stanley Yelnats isn’t so surprised when a miscarriage of justice sends him to a juvenile detention center. After all, his family has been ridden with bad luck ever since a one-legged gypsy put a curse on his great-great grandfather. He is told that the hard labor he must perform, digging five-foot holes in the dried up soil where Green Lake once sat, is meant to build character. But it soon becomes clear to Stanley that the warden is really using the boys to search for something very valuable. The story of the hidden treasure, along with the warden, Stanley’s friend Zero, and the curse on the Yelnats family are all part of a compelling puzzle that has taken generations to unravel.

Holes is the 1999 Newbery Medal winner for most distinguished American children’s book.

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The Authors

Holes by Louis Sachar PDF

Louis Sachar (/ˈsækər/ SAK-ər;[1] born March 20, 1954) is an American young-adult mystery-comedy author. He is best known for the Wayside School series and the novel Holes.

Holes won the 1998 U.S. National Book Award for Young People’s Literature[2] and the 1999 Newbery Medal for the year’s “most distinguished contribution to American literature for children”.[3] In 2013, it was ranked sixth among all children’s novels in a survey published by School Library Journal
After graduating from Tustin high school, Sachar attended Antioch College for a semester before transferring to University of California, Berkeley, during which time he began helping at an elementary school in return for three college credits.[5] Sachar later recalled,

I thought it over and decided it was a pretty good deal. College credits, no homework, no term papers, no tests, all I had to do was help out in a second/third grade class at Hillside Elementary School. Besides helping out in a classroom, I also became the Noontime Supervisor, or “Louis the Yard Teacher” as I was known to the kids. It became my favorite college class, and a life changing experience.[5]

Sachar graduated from UC Berkeley in 1976 with a degree in Economics, and began working on Sideways Stories From Wayside School, a children’s book set at an elementary school with supernatural elements. Although the book’s students were named after children from Hillside and there is a presumably autobiographical character named “Louis the Yard Teacher,”[5] Sachar has said that he draws very little from personal experience, stating that “. … my personal experiences are kind of boring. I have to make up what I put in my books.”[6]

Sachar wrote the book at night over the course of nine months, during which he worked during the day in a Connecticut sweater warehouse.[5] After being fired from the warehouse, Sachar decided to go to law school, around which time Sideways Stories From Wayside School was accepted for publication. The book was released in 1978; though it was not widely distributed and subsequently did not sell very well, Sachar began to accumulate a fan base among young readers.[7] Sachar graduated from University of California, Hastings College of the Law in 1980 and did part-time legal work while continuing to write children’s books.[8] By 1989, his books were selling well enough that Sachar was able to begin writing full-time.[5]

Sachar married Carla Askew,[9] an elementary school counselor, in 1985. They live in Austin, Texas, and have a daughter, Sherre, born January 19, 1987. Sachar has mentioned both his wife and daughter in his books; Carla was the inspiration for the counselor in There’s a Boy in the Girls’ Bathroom (1988),[5] and Stanley’s lawyer in Holes.

When asked about whether he thought children have changed over the years, Sachar responded: “I’ve actually been writing since 1976, and my first book is still in print and doing very well.”

On April 18, 2003, Disney’s film adaptation of Holes was released, which earned $71.4 million worldwide. Sachar himself wrote the film’s screenplay. On November 19, 2005, the Wayside School series was adapted into a special, two years later, becoming a animated TV show with two seasons and aired on Teletoon in Canada.

Works
Wayside School
Sideways Stories from Wayside School (1978)
Wayside School is Falling Down (1989)
Sideways Arithmetic From Wayside School (1989)
More Sideways Arithmetic From Wayside School (1994)
Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger (1995)
Wayside School Beneath the Cloud of Doom (2020)
Marvin Redpost
Kidnapped at Birth? (1992)
Why Pick on Me? (1993)
Is He a Girl? (1993)
Alone In His Teacher’s House (1994)
Class President (1999)
A Flying Birthday Cake? (1999)
Super Fast Out of Control! (2000)
A Magic Crystal? (2000)
Holes series
Holes (1998) — winner of the National Book Award[2] and Newbery Medal[3]
Stanley Yelnats’ Survival Guide to Camp Green Lake (2003)
Small Steps (2006)
Other books
Johnny’s in the Basement (1981)
Someday Angeline (1983)
Sixth Grade Secrets (1987) (known as Pig City in the UK[10])
There’s a Boy in the Girls’ Bathroom (1987)
The Boy Who Lost His Face (1989)
Dogs Don’t Tell Jokes (1991)
The Cardturner (2010)
Captain Tory (2011) (collected in The Chronicles of Harris Burdick: Fourteen Amazing Authors Tell the Tales)
Fuzzy Mud (2015)

Dimensions and Characteristics of Holes by Louis Sachar PDF

  • Listening Length 4 hours and 30 minutes
    Author Louis Sachar
    Narrator Kerry Beyer
    Whispersync for Voice Ready
    Audible.com Release Date November 07, 2003
    Publisher Listening Library
    Program Type Audiobook
    Version Unabridged
    Language English
    Identification Number B0000YSH5G
  • Book Name : Holes by Louis Sachar PDF

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Top reviews

Parcopia “My goodness what a criminal justice system that sentences a first-time offender to a year and a half sentence (“you’re going to be thirsty for the next 18 months” p. 15) at a juvenile penal facility work camp! Really? Where they dig holes all day seven days a week! No wonder kids grow up thinking the justice system is unfair. Books like these are not helping. I got the book because it had the shiny gold sticker on the front and got great reviews. I got it for my ten-year-old but he didn’t want to read it so I read it.

Can an entire lake (“the largest lake in Texas” p. 15) dry up in one person’s lifetime? Kissing Kate Barlow was a school teacher, already an adult when the lake was full, then as an older adult she is burying treasure in the middle of its dry basin. I’m just sayin. Oh and Trout Walker catches up to her and Sam with a motor boat. Yet years later she’s robbing stagecoaches! A bit anachronistic.

Why did Stanley feel he had to lie in his letters to home and make it sound like he was water skiing and having fun when really he was in a slave camp? The explanation is that they wanted to “pretend”. Perhaps adults just shouldn’t read this book.

Stanley just HAPPENS to be sentenced to dig a whole and he just HAPPENS to find a treasure from an ancestor in an area only 5ft by 5ft within the first few days, and it HAPPENS to have his name on the suitcase? And his new friend just HAPPENS to be the guy that stole the sneakers that put him there! And they survive on the very onions that Sam used to grow. and the “fabulous spiced peaches” (p. 101) of Katherine Barlow! I realize the author is trying to force a circle but it’s just not realistic.

A word about Sam whom we learn about in chapter 25. Apparently he was well-respected, “nobody argued with Sam” he ran a successful onion-growing business and the townspeople would come to him for onion remedies. Even the town doctor used Sam’s onion-cure for baldness. He was a valued carpenter as well. Yet all it took was a kiss (“it’s against the law for a negro to kiss a white woman” p.113) for all hell to break lose: the school house is burned down, a donkey is shot, and Sam is to be hung on a rope without a trial apparently. With kids growing up with stories like these, it’s no wonder we don’t make much progress.

Why were the guards so loyal to the sadistic Warden? Were they going to get a share of a treasure whose only proof of existence was family lore? And of course all these juvenile delinquents are so nice and don’t even curse. I’m sure they were all innocent like Stanley and Zero. Even the car thief “Twitch” was innocent, his criminal record justified as the result of some kind of medical condition: “I never plan to steal one…I’ll just start twitching” p. 145.

Katherine Barlow was a respected school teacher. After Sam kisses her, Sam is then murdered for the “crime” in front of her. She never recovers from the shock. She turns into the “famous outlaw” Kissing Kate Barlow, who leaves a lipstick mark on her murder victims and one victim is Stanley’s ancestor whom she leaves stranded in a desert to suffer and die. In short, she goes insane. Why is there not more outrage from women readers at this demeaning narrative? A woman who cannot rise up and overcome the lost love of a man, but rather dwells in the same moment for the rest of her life (Mrs. Havisham?), re-enacting the kiss on dead corpses like some necrophiliac! Yes, it’s really quite disturbing the more you think about it.”

Ruslan “It is not a secret that a reader, especially a child reader, would put himself in place of the protagonist and often imagine himself “living” the story he is reading. Imagining himself in the devastation of being arrested (no matter for what reason); imagining himself forced to undress in a stranger man’s presence (watching him); wondering why would a criminal woman’s kissing somebody be considered to be cool; empathizing with a 15-year-old girl being traded for a pig by her own father (a total lack of family bonds, parental instincts, and love); and many more… I don’t see how all these would not ruin a child’s dream world and imagination, how it wouldn’t damage a child’s psychology, and emotional growth. Not to speak how any of these can possibly help.
Exposing our youth to this kind of abusive content and then wondering “why…?” must be a bigger degeneration than hypocrisy.”
Reference: Wikipedia

Holes by Louis Sachar PDF

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