The Big Fix
The Big Fix
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Darby Creek Publishing
Just the Series: Bareknuckle   

Series and Publisher: Bareknuckle   

Annotation: In 1872 New York City, a young newspaper reporter puts his life in danger when he goes undercover to investigate a conspiracy in the violent world of bare-knuckle boxing.
 
Reviews: 3
Catalog Number: #80379
Format: Library Binding
Special Formats: High Low High Low
Copyright Date: 2014
Edition Date: 2014 Release Date: 01/01/14
Pages: 107 pages
ISBN: 1-467-71459-3
ISBN 13: 978-1-467-71459-4
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2013028887
Dimensions: 20 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews

Corruption is everywhere in 1870s New York City, and George Choogart wants to be the journalist who exposes it. George arrives from England with a job offer from the New York Times and, as a test of his skills, is assigned the task of finding a story so new as to be unfamiliar to the editor. He thinks he has found it in Lew Mayflower's Woodrat Saloon, where he goes undercover as a fighter to learn more about illegal bare-knuckle boxing matches. Politician Big Jim Dickinson finds fighters there for use in his secret and very crooked matches. Although George is in the thick of the intrigue and danger, it is female reporter Holly Quine who gets the scoop. Sacks nicely captures the chaos of the time and place and weaves a fast-paced, action-packed tale. Detailed descriptions of the brawls and bare-knuckle fights make up the bulk of the text. Several peripheral characters, while quite colorful, appear to have little purpose. In the end, George leaves New York and heads west, thus paving the way for a series of tales set in the Woodrat with new fighters and their back stories and penned by different authors. Publishing simultaneously are The Giant, by Jonathan Mary-Todd, Fighter's Alley, by Heather Duffy Stone, and Lightning's Run, by Gabriel Goodman. Lots of action and low page count should propel reluctant readers along. (Historical fiction. 11-15)

Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)

Set in a nineteenth-century NYC Bowery underground boxing club, these fast-paced and involving hi-lo novels--filled with fight action, intrigue, adventure, and a multiethnic cast of characters--starkly portray the social, political, and economic realities of the period and place. There are recurring secondary characters, but each book's unique central character drives the plot and resolves the story's conflicts. Compelling, reluctant-reader-friendly historical fiction.

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Kirkus Reviews
Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)
Voice of Youth Advocates
Word Count: 14,817
Reading Level: 4.3
Interest Level: 7-12
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.3 / points: 2.0 / quiz: 163030 / grade: Middle Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:4.3 / points:5.0 / quiz:Q63724
Lexile: HL590L
Guided Reading Level: R

George Choogart has just stepped off the boat to Manhattan. In England, he was a teenage star reporter. But he'll have to prove himself all over again if he wants an American newspaper job. When George stumbles across the Woodrat, an underground boxing club, he realizes he's found his next story. The Woodrat's owner shows George a world of corruption--a world that might be too dangerous for either of them. Woodrat staffers are disappearing. Big Jim Dickinson, one of New York's wealthiest men, might be to blame. But if George wants to stop Big Jim, he'll have to conquer the boxing ring first. -- "Journal"


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