The Pinballs

by Betsy Byars

Ebook, 1977

Status

Available

Call number

Fic Childrens Byars

Collection

Publication

HarperCollins

Description

Three lonely foster children learn to care about themselves and each other.

User reviews

LibraryThing member amberella
Various foster children with very different backgrounds come to live together and finally become friends. A childhood favorite.
LibraryThing member rumyana2
This is a touching and heart warming story. Carlie, Harvey and Thomas J., are three foster children, who have been taken in by the Masons. The girl, Carlie, is the oldest and the toughest of the three. She is convinced that people are not to be trusted. Harvey has two broken legs, the result of
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being run over by an alcoholic father and abandoned by his mother 3 years earlier. Thomas J was also abandoned; he was found as a toddler by the elderly twin sisters Benson, whose minimal love and care for him has ended when both of them are hospitalized with broken hips. The Masons provide a supportive environment that helps the three children learn to care for each other and begin to experience love and trust. This novel shows that there is not just “bad” in the world and young people can actually do something about their future. They are not just “pinballs” pushed constantly in new directions by fate or outside forces. It makes one realize that love, hope and trust are not impossible dreams, but reality and it’s available to those who are willing to believe in and accept them.
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LibraryThing member lauraklandoll
This is the story of 3 young children placed into a foster home for very different reasons. They struggle to adapt in their new enviroment as well as with each other. They feel like pinballs with no say in what happens to them.

This was a moderately good story about children put in situations they
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have no control of because of their age. Your heart goes out to them, you wonder what these adults are thinking as they ruin their children's lives.

This would be a good book for a short reading session. Children can empathize with these charchters quite well.
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LibraryThing member AnissaAndrews
Good book about kids in foster care, abuse, neglect but without being too graphic or unsettling for young readers. Characters are realistic, if somewhat dated, and easy to relate to. A good post reading activity would be to "finish" the story for one of the children.
LibraryThing member supertomato
i loved the book .It is an amazing book to read.The book is good because it talks
about kids in an foster home who have a different story behind them.And how they don't get along at frist and then by the end of the book they are all friends.
LibraryThing member booksandwine
I remember reading this book in elementary school and feeling heartbroken for the characters. The characters in this book are called Pinballs because they are foster-children bounced from house to house. If you want a quick read that will have you feeling some emotion, check this book out.
LibraryThing member briannad84
Always heard about this book growing up. Finally got to read it this past week and it's a decent (and sad) little story. Each of the three foster kids all had their own tragedies they had to deal with. Harvey's mother made me sad and the Benson twins were a bit freakish and Carlie annoyed me at
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first but then improved - which I'm sure was the author's intention. I thought it would end with them getting adopted by the Masons or at least one kid returning to their home, but nope. Will definately be reading this one to my son!
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LibraryThing member SalemSmith
I think I could use this book in a classroom if I was in an alternative school, where maybe some of my students were going through a similar situation. I think it would be good for middle schoolers. During this time, students start to become aware of backgrounds of other students.

If I used this
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book, I could use it for a lesson on theme or characterization.
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LibraryThing member nx74defiant
Kids in foster care. Nice, happy ending.
LibraryThing member JenniferRobb
Three children--two boys and a girl--end up in foster care at the Masons home. The girl is the most outspoken of the three. She describes them as pinballs--being directed by forces outside their control. Over time, she comes to realize how much she cares for these people who have now become her
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family and decides that pinballs is not an apt description for them.

I do wonder if the fact that three kids have such bad things happen to them that they have to go live with someone else might not be too disturbing for the young readers for whom this is written. I had picked it up thinking that I might pass it on to my nephew, but decided not too because of the subject matter.
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LibraryThing member SeriousGrace
Even though this was written with children in mind, I found myself getting emotional reading this story about three children in foster care. One child had been raised by elderly twins and doesn't even know his real birth date or age. The second child had both of his legs broken when his dad in a
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drunken rage "accidentally" ran over them. The third child, the one with the most personality, was abandoned by her parents and comes across as very jaded about the whole system. She is the one who came up with the nickname "pinballs" because they were bounced around the system exactly like pinballs, with no control over their destinies. It takes some time and some hard lessons learned before each child realizes they are not pinballs.
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LibraryThing member OptimisticCautiously
I do not full remember this book but I do remember it had a profound impact on me. I read it is a child/pre-teen/young teen (don’t remember exactly but before high school) and it was one of three books from that time that I decided to keep forever. I was a prolific reader at the time but passed
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on most books, yet this one remains in my collection in tatters. It was understandable and relatable despite being so far removed from “the average” experience. It started my life-long desire to adopt or even foster, despite that I have never managed to fulfil it.
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LibraryThing member fuzzi
Three children arrive at a foster home on the same day, angry, disappointed, and scared. How they learn to cope with their family issues and each other isn't portrayed in a contrived manner, but more realistic...with a touch of hope. Satisfying read, wish it were longer.
LibraryThing member AngelaLam
This book was so good my daughter wanted to know if there was a sequel. Unfortunately, there is not.

The way the characters grew and changed impressed both my daughter and myself.

A great read for children and adults!

Awards

Texas Bluebonnet Award (Nominee — 1981)
Young Hoosier Book Award (Nominee — 1980)
Georgia Children's Book Award (Winner — Grades 4-8 — 1979)
Utah Beehive Book Award (Nominee — Children's Fiction — 1980)
Buckeye Children's & Teen Book Award (Nominee — Grades 4-8 — 1982)
Mark Twain Readers Award (Winner — 1980)
Grand Canyon Reader Award (Nominee — 1981)
Golden Archer Award (Winner — 1981)
Josette Frank Award (Winner — 1977)
Maud Hart Lovelace Award (Nominee — 1981)
Gouden Griffel (Zilveren — 1984)

Original publication date

1977

ISBN

9780062239440

DDC/MDS

Fic Childrens Byars

Rating

½ (101 ratings; 3.8)
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