To the Bozo, the clown who sits inside the cage above the dunk tank, everyone is a "mark." Once he has zeroed in on his victim, the Bozo comes up with the perfect wisecrack—something funny enough to make people stop and listen, and cruel enough to hook the mark. Now the mark is bent on revenge, and he'll buy however many balls he needs to hit the target and see the Bozo plunge into the water. It's a game that fascinates Chad, who lives on the Jersey shore, where the boardwalk turns into an amusement park every summer. He wishes he could shout at the world from the safety of a cage—his dad ran out on him and his mom, and now everyone seems convinced that Chad will wind up a loser, too. He's determined to get a job playing the Bozo, something he knows he'd be good at. Suddenly, Chad finds himself thrown into a strange and twisted world, where humor has far more power than he ever imagined.
With a crackling plot and smart, funny dialogue, Dunk pulls readers along on a journey that exposes a universal truth: We all need to laugh.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
June 18, 2013 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780544236974
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780544236974
- File size: 405 KB
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Languages
- English
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Levels
- ATOS Level: 3.8
- Lexile® Measure: 520
- Interest Level: 9-12(UG)
- Text Difficulty: 1-2
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
September 23, 2002
The slightly tawdry world of boardwalk arcades along the New Jersey shore is just one of the attractions of Lubar's (Hidden Talents) engrossing novel. From the first moment soon-to-be-11th-grader Chad hears the boardwalk clown hurling insults ("His voice ripped the air like a chain saw," the novel begins), the teen is mesmerized. The "bozo," whose witty barbs lure passersby to try and drop him into a water tank, represents all that Chad is not: "Nobody ignored him. Nobody looked down on him or told him he was a loser." The boy adds working as a bozo to his list of goals—along with seeing a certain girl again—for what he hopes will be "the greatest summer of his life." But plans go awry when a rival beats him to the romance punch, his best friend is struck with a life-threatening illness, and Chad has run-ins not only with the police but also with the bozo himself, a troubled man who sublets a room in Chad's house. As Chad surmounts each challenge, he shakes off the shadow of his deadbeat absent father and learns the difference between "a laugh that can cut you up worse than a knife" and laughter that heals. Lubar ably charts a watershed summer between boyhood and manhood; the boardwalk bozo serves as a deft metaphor for the power and control for which adolescents hunger. Ages 12-up. -
Booklist
September 1, 2002
Gr. 8-12. Sitting over a tub of dirty water, the Bozo taunts the crowd until some poor fool forks over enough money to finally dunk him. The Bozo is amazing and powerful--and Chad wants to be that Bozo. Full of anger at a father who left him, a mother who works too much, adults who think he is a loser, and the autoimmune disease that is killing his best friend, Chad is sure he could be the perfect Bozo. And master the craft he does, only to find it more useful in real life than in the tank. Chad is the prototype of the hard-luck teen whom police mistake for a petty criminal, teachers think is lazy, and who never gets the girl. The Bozo, too, is classic: the bitter loner who is slowly turning his life around. With painful truth, Lubar has created complex, difficult to understand characters that seem straight from real life. Only the "happy" ending concedes to formula.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2002, American Library Association.) -
Publisher's Weekly
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The Horn Book
January 1, 2003
Mesmerized by the new Bozo working at a boardwalk dunk tank, Chad decides he too wants to "scream at the world from the safety of a cage." Malcolm, the troubled carnival clown, trains Chad to work the tank and encourages the teenager to handle some difficult personal relationships. Both are well-realized characters in a solid novel about the anger that often fuels humor--and the compassion that enhances it.(Copyright 2003 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
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School Library Journal
Starred review from August 1, 2002
Gr 7-10-Dunk grips readers from the very first sentence and doesn't let go until the last. The summer crowd hasn't quite arrived on the boardwalk in a Jersey shore town when Chad becomes entranced by the Bozo-the clown in the dunk tank-whose voice and comments are as irritating as nails on a chalkboard. It occurs to him that if he can become a Bozo, then he can take out his anger on people who have made him miserable, such as his deadbeat dad and his teachers. As he learns the craft, he gains new respect for clever Bozos who quickly choose a "mark" from people passing on the boardwalk, hook them with a wisecrack that's prickly enough to make them want to dunk him, and then keep the sarcasm going. Although Chad thinks he'll instantly ace the technique, he grudgingly realizes that it is an art. When his best friend becomes seriously ill, he learns that the softer side of humor is as vitally important as the more vengeful barbs. Plot clearly delineates not only self-understanding, but also peer pressure, family conflict, and first romance through the mechanism of Chad's summer adventures. The story line shows the teen's quandary, but does not become stereotypical; few kids want a summer job as a boardwalk Bozo to resolve their conflicts. The author creates immediacy through the protagonist's very typical problems; he wants to find romance, to thwart a troublemaker, and to help his friend. Similar to heroes in stories by Chris Crutcher, Chad learns valuable life lessons in a thoroughly enjoyable and convincing way.-Susan Cooley, Tower Hill School, Wilmington, DECopyright 2002 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
Languages
- English
Levels
- ATOS Level:3.8
- Lexile® Measure:520
- Interest Level:9-12(UG)
- Text Difficulty:1-2
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