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Children's Fiction General

One Missing Finger

by (author) Don Trembath

Publisher
Orca Book Publishers
Initial publish date
Sep 2001
Category
General
Recommended Age
8 to 12
Recommended Grade
3 to 7
Recommended Reading age
8 to 12
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781551431949
    Publish Date
    Sep 2001
    List Price
    $8.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Out of print

This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.

Description

Meanwhile, Sidney has fallen for Joey even though Joey's mother wants him to buzz off. Sidney ignores that request, and even wins Joey's mother over, but his own mom suggests that he back off a bit, and then tells him why—"she's too rough for you." Sidney responds in a way he never has before: he uses his head.
Jeffrey wants his father back. But would getting his parents back together bring happiness to his life? After watching Sidney and Charlie and their respective romances, Jeffrey begins to doubt it, and instead decides to impose his own form of order in the home of Grandma and Grandpa Anderson.
One Missing Finger continues the story of the three small-town misfits introduced in Frog Face and the Three Boys. Reaching new comedic heights as they stumble further through the jungle of friendship and into the swamp of young love, the three boys realize that as they get older they need to rely on themselves and trust each other.
Don Trembath's teen novels, including Lefty Carmichael Has a Fit and the Harper Winslow series, have all gone on to become bestsellers. Frog Face and the Three Boys has been short-listed for the Ontario Library Association's Silver Birch Award.
One Missing Finger is the second of four books in The Black Belt Series.
Book one is Frog Face and the Three Boys.
Book three is The Bachelors.
Book four is The Big Show.

About the author

Don Trembath began writing for keeps when he was 13 years old. He wrote horror stories at night and read them to his little brother as he tried to fall asleep. "Every morning I'd ask him if he'd had a nightmare and he'd say, 'No. Was I supposed to?' I soon abandoned horror stories and moved on to comedy. I read those stories to him and would ask him in the morning. 'Did you laugh?' One day he said, 'No, but I had a nightmare.'"

Don was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba on May 22, 1963--the third youngest of four boys. In the winter he played hockey and in the summer football, baseball, and soccer. Between games, he went to school. At the age of 14, Don moved with his family to Alberta. He graduated from Paul Kane High School in St. Albert and went to the University of Alberta to study English. He has written for weekly and daily newspapers, local and national magazines, and a host of trade publications.
Don's first book, The Tuesday Cafe, was published in 1996. Since then he has written nine others, with two more, Daydream Believer and Hypnotized published in 2007. Don also teaches writing at MacEwan College in Edmonton, and regularly visit schools and libraries across the country.

Don currently lives in the town of Morinville, Alberta with his wife, Lisa, their three kids, three laid back cats, and their neighbor's big dog.

Don Trembath's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"... will have a place in most libraries."

Resource Links

"Trembath's forte here is dialogue. . . the whole thing adds up to a snappy, funny read."

Globe and Mail

"Between one troublesome finger and another, the dilemmas of the three heroes intersect with entertaining results."

". . . a fun, light read for kids who enjoy the ridiculous and might recognize a bit of themselves in the three hapless heroes. The pace of this book and its upbeat energy will capture the interest of reluctant young readers, and its generous approach to human weakness and eccentricity will buoy the hearts of a wide range of readers, including adults."

Quill & Quire

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