Copyright Date:
2018
Edition Date:
2018
Release Date:
09/18/18
Illustrator:
Hearne, James,
Pages:
1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN:
1-459-81694-3
ISBN 13:
978-1-459-81694-7
Dewey:
E
LCCN:
2018933724
Dimensions:
23 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist
(Sat Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Skating on a pond with her family and friends, Lucy watches kids playing hockey and asks her parents if she can try it. The next day, she's at the rink for her first "Intro to Hockey" lesson. A coach leads the kids through warm-ups, stickhandling, shooting, practicing how to fall, and an obstacle race. Afterwards, Lucy and her enthusiastic friends decide to form their own team. Also available in a French edition, this upbeat sports story is pleasing in many ways. It emphasizes the fun of playing hockey and the necessity of practice to build skills, while delivering the implicit message that safety is important. Everyone on the ice wears a helmet in the cheerful digital illustrations, which also include a player on a sled, as used in para hockey. Though a few passages in rhyming text read awkwardly ("Lucy is focused. She tries not to miss. / Like with so many sports, you just need practice!"), the latest volume in the Lucy Tries Sports series scores when it comes to encouraging girls in athletics.
Kirkus Reviews
While skating at the local pond, young Lucy sees a hockey game and wants to learn to play.Bowes makes no bones about it: She wants all kids to get involved with sports. And as less and less emphasis is being placed on sports and free recess in schools, the book is timely. Hearne brings a friendly, undemanding cartoon aesthetic to the proceedings as Lucy enrolls with a batch of boys and girls in a clinic to learn the fundamentals of the sport. Boosterism occasionally drifts into preachiness ("Like with so many sports, / you just need practice!"), and once or twice the couplets just fall flat: "Hockey's a great game, / and you can see why— / a winter team sport / that's so fun to try." But the heart and soul of this book is to encourage youngsters to get off their duffs and do something with their bodies and, on a secondary level, to do it with other kids to enhance the joy and gamesmanship: "A great day to skate. / The place is the pond. / Everyone is here! / It's a fun way to bond." Lucy is white, and her fellow learners are a multiracial group. Lucy Joue au Hockey, translated into French by Rachel Martinez, publishes simultaneously. A smattering of hockey facts closes each book.Good intentions and what looks like having a good time outweigh the moments of ham-handedness. (Picture book. 3-5)
Lucy and her family are skating on an outdoor rink when she sees a game of hockey goingon. It looks like fun, but maybe too challenging. Supported by her parents, Lucy enrolls in an introductory-hockey clinic, and thanks to an encouraging instructor, she and her friends learn basic hockey skills, have fun on the ice and decide to add hockey to their list of favorite sports!
The Lucy Tries Sports series encourages children to get active and participate in sports and recreation. To find out what Lucy will try next, visit www.lucytriessports.com.
Also available in French (9781459820036).