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Reviews for The Goatnappers

 The Goatnappers magazine reviews

The average rating for The Goatnappers based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2008-05-05 00:00:00
2007was given a rating of 3 stars Pia Hilton
Reviewed by Carrie Spellman for TeensReadToo.com Freshman Justin Martin is pretty sure all of his problems in life are about to be over. He's just been made the youngest varsity baseball player in almost two decades, he found a bike to take him home after practice, and all he needs to do to make everything complete is to sell Little Billy, one of the family's pet goats. He even finds someone to buy Little Billy for exactly the right price! Justin's life is golden. Until Justin and his siblings find out that Little Billy's new owner is mistreating him. If they leave him they'll all feel horrible and guilty forever. If they try to buy him back, Justin loses his bike and his spot on the baseball team. If they steal him... There just doesn't seem to be a good solution. Just when it looks pretty bad, Justin's long-absent father appears, and things get much worse. Now everyone in the family is thrown into an emotional mess. If Justin doesn't figure it all out quick, and get his head back in the game, he may just lose his spot on the baseball team anyway. Not to mention the respect of his family, and himself. Justin's life may not be something you recognize, or it may be a lot like yours. Either way, the decisions he has to make are a lot like the ones everyone deals with. How will you deal with injustice? Do you give someone who hurt you a chance to explain? Do you let them back in and risk them hurting you again? How far will you go to get what you want? This book is about deciding right and wrong for yourself. It's about choosing what kind of person you're going to be and defining your place in the world. These aren't easy things to decide, but I think Justin sets a good, honest example.
Review # 2 was written on 2013-03-24 00:00:00
2007was given a rating of 4 stars Shirley Bradford
Less intense, with a plot centered on Justin, in this sequel to Lost Goat Lane. Nice twists to the story lines involving the kids and their animals at the end. "There must be such a thing as a Spread Factor, he thought with a grim smile. It would explain how something, say a glass of milk,could be an exact measurable amount, but if you spilled it, it spread out in a way that made it seem a lot bigger. The Spread Factor would also explain why Mom always started off working a certain number of hours at her jobs, then gradually added more and more hours until neither of she nor they knew exactly when she would get home. And it could also explain why the more Justin tried to catch up in math, the more he kept running into things that he didn't understand. Most of all, the Spread Factor would explain how his problems, which could be listed on half a single page of unlined of lined notepaper, once they got out, kept spreading like spilled milk, all over the neighborhood." "That's when Justin realized three things. One, everybody has problems. Two, the worst problems are the ones where nothing you do will make any difference. And three, he was lucky that his problems were the kind he could do something about."


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