Holes by Louis Sachar has been sitting on my shelf forever but I picked it up this week when I exhausted my Kindle’s battery. How lovely to hold an actual book again. I know this is a book for tweens, but I’d heard such good things about it that I wanted to see for myself.
I loved the premise: that Stanley is wrongly found guilty of stealing a pair of trainers and is sent to a juvenile correction camp where the punishment is to dig a hole a day. Five feet deep and five feet wide. Every day. It is supposed to be character-building, but Stanley thinks there is another agenda. “There is no lake at Camp Green Lake. There once was a very large lake here, the largest lake in Texas. That was over a hundred years ago. Now it is just a dry, flat wasteland.”
It is a story about finding out who you are, standing up to bullies and finding your bravery. “Out on the lake, rattlesnakes and scorpions find shade under rocks and in the holes dug by the campers.”
Woven in with the day-to-day tale of hole-digging is the background to Stanley’s unlucky family; unluckiness blamed on his no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing-great-great-grandfather. Stanley is a kind of every-boy, who helps a boy worse off than himself and ends up challenging the system. And Sachar ties up the loose-ends brilliantly.
Not just for kids.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Read my review of THE CARDTURNER, also by Louis Sachar.
If you like this, try:-
‘The Ship’ by Antonia Honeywell
‘The Choir’ by Joanna Trollope
‘The Mystery of Three Quarters’ by Sophie Hannah #3Poirot
And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview HOLES by Louis Sachar http://wp.me/p5gEM4-K1 via @SandraDanby
