Unstoppable

On the field or off, it takes all you've got to be a winner. If anyone understands the phrase “tough luck,” it's Harrison. As a foster kid in a cruel home, he knows his dream of one day playing for the NFL is a long shot. Then Harrison's luck seems to change. He is brought into a new home with kind, loving parents-his new dad is even a football coach. Harrison's big build and his incredible determination quickly make him a star running back on the junior high school team. In no time, he's practically unstoppable. But Harrison's good luck can't last forever.

In his most dramatic and hard-hitting story yet, former NFL defensive end Tim Green writes about what it takes to be a winner, even when it seems like fate has dealt an impossible hand. Inspired by interviews with real-life cancer survivors and insider sports experience, this unforgettable story shows a brave boy who learns what it truly means to be unstoppable.

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Unstoppable

On the field or off, it takes all you've got to be a winner. If anyone understands the phrase “tough luck,” it's Harrison. As a foster kid in a cruel home, he knows his dream of one day playing for the NFL is a long shot. Then Harrison's luck seems to change. He is brought into a new home with kind, loving parents-his new dad is even a football coach. Harrison's big build and his incredible determination quickly make him a star running back on the junior high school team. In no time, he's practically unstoppable. But Harrison's good luck can't last forever.

In his most dramatic and hard-hitting story yet, former NFL defensive end Tim Green writes about what it takes to be a winner, even when it seems like fate has dealt an impossible hand. Inspired by interviews with real-life cancer survivors and insider sports experience, this unforgettable story shows a brave boy who learns what it truly means to be unstoppable.

19.95 In Stock
Unstoppable

Unstoppable

by Tim Green

Narrated by Tim Green

Unabridged — 6 hours, 51 minutes

Unstoppable

Unstoppable

by Tim Green

Narrated by Tim Green

Unabridged — 6 hours, 51 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$19.95
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)

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Overview

On the field or off, it takes all you've got to be a winner. If anyone understands the phrase “tough luck,” it's Harrison. As a foster kid in a cruel home, he knows his dream of one day playing for the NFL is a long shot. Then Harrison's luck seems to change. He is brought into a new home with kind, loving parents-his new dad is even a football coach. Harrison's big build and his incredible determination quickly make him a star running back on the junior high school team. In no time, he's practically unstoppable. But Harrison's good luck can't last forever.

In his most dramatic and hard-hitting story yet, former NFL defensive end Tim Green writes about what it takes to be a winner, even when it seems like fate has dealt an impossible hand. Inspired by interviews with real-life cancer survivors and insider sports experience, this unforgettable story shows a brave boy who learns what it truly means to be unstoppable.


Editorial Reviews

Booklist

With a sharp intensity fueled by both wrenching events and the main character’s white-hot core of rage, Green sends an abused foster kid blasting his way through daunting challenges on and off the football field. Harrison’s ferocious struggles with inner demons and physical obstacles make absorbing reading.

Los Angeles Times

The star running back on his junior high school football team is diagnosed with cancer, teaching him the real meaning of bravery and determination.

Gordon Korman

I don’t know anyone — kid or adult — who won’t root heart and soul for Harrison. Unstoppable means you can’t put this book down!

Jon Scieszka

Could not put it down. It is so solid, and real, and true. Absolutely heroic. And something every guy should read.

bestselling author Gordon Korman

I don’t know anyone -- kid or adult -- who won’t root heart and soul for Harrison. Unstoppable means you can’t put this book down!

Children's Literature - Krisan Murphy

Read by the author, this audiobook is not the stereotypical football story of a weak kid who gains success and leads his team to victory in the championship. Harrison Johnson, an oversized and muscular middle schooler, has a lifelong history of bad knocks. After unintentionally causing the death of a foster father who was the latest in a long string of abusive situations, Harrison seems to experience the first glimmer of hope when he is placed in foster care with a football coach and his lawyer wife. Finally, the pent-up anger of injustice and pain Harrison carries has an outlet on the football field, and his dream of playing ball becomes a reality. The relationships in this story are vivid, heart-wrenching, and realistic; by contrast, they show the difference between dysfunctional and normal interpersonal relationships. The tension is constant and compelling, driving the plot until Harrison's knee injury reveals a life-threatening disease, bone cancer. The author captures the agony of Harrison, Coach Kelly and his wife, and Harrison's friends as they cope with the one thing that threatens the young boy's dream of a football career as part of a life that has left bad breaks behind. With sheer determination and the help of a Gulf War veteran who lost his leg in battle, Harrison fights to regain his dreams when his leg is amputated. Young boys, athletes, and at-risk children of all ages will eagerly listen to this intense and satisfying story. Reviewer: Krisan Murphy

Children's Literature - Claudia Mills

Thirteen-year-old Harrison Johnson dreams of being a football player, but the reality of his life is that he is a cruelly abused foster kid threatened with a belt-beating if he dares to so much as glance at a football game on TV. Even when he is finally placed with a loving foster family, where his new dad coaches junior high football, he is taunted by a mean teacher, bullied by teammates, and woefully inexperienced in the game he has spent his life wanting to play. But Harrison is an almost freakishly huge, strong, fast kid who needs an outlet for his understandable inner rage, an outlet that football supplies. He is unstoppable, on the brink of leading his team to their first-ever championship, until an unexpected medical diagnosis forces him into a battle with his most relentless adversary ever. Bestselling novelist Tim Green, himself a former professional football player, has prodigious storytelling skills, telling Harrison's wrenching story in a hundred short chapters, each ending with a hook like "The first words made him go cold" and "Then everything went dark" (a device that does come to feel manipulative after the sixtieth or seventieth use). Although the novel reads like two novels sandwiched between one cover (the opening problem of finding a family is resolved only to segue into a completely new challenge for Harrison), both halves make for riveting reading, and it's impossible not to root for Harrison to show himself yet again to have earned the label "unstoppable." Reviewer: Claudia Mills, Ph.D.

VOYA - Mark Flowers

In Green's newest football novel, Harrison, a troubled foster child in a new home, a new town, and a new school, struggles with his anger and isolation, finding salvation only in his incredible abilities on the football field. But, just as his team is poised to win a state championship, Harrison is faced with an obstacle much more severe than any defensive lineman. From the specifics of Harrison's background, to the salvation-through-football theme, to the abrupt turn to a darker subject, to something minor like an enemy on the team with a threatening lawyer for a father—the whole set-up bears uncanny resemblance to Cohen's Leverage (Dutton, 2011/Voya February 2011). Even granting that Cohen's work is aimed at a much older audience, the comparison does not flatter Green. Where Cohen is psychologically complex and morally ambiguous, Green is un-nuanced and didactic. Green is also unflaggingly linear in his plotting and development, giving the novel a strangely flattened feeling. Still, these are essentially flaws of design, and it is clearly in execution that Green shines as a writer. His prose, particularly (if unsurprisingly) in his descriptions of football, is muscular and propulsive. Though, as noted, his characters are not deep, they are nevertheless vivid and distinct. If the whole novel seems rushed and predetermined in its pacing, that may well be a positive feature for fans of the genre. All in all, this title is an undistinguished effort, but certainly not an embarrassing one. Reviewer: Mark Flowers

School Library Journal - Audio

Gr 4–7—Tim Green reads his latest football story (HarperCollins, 2012) about an emotionally abused but athletically gifted 13-year-old. Staccato pacing coupled with distinct and persuasive descriptions of football characterize Green's style as both writer and narrator. A victim of the worse kind of foster parents, Harrison is essentially enslaved until a freak accident and an exceptionally kind counselor get him placed in a foster home with a childless couple who always wanted a boy like him. As new parents, the Kelly's patience and unconditional love toward Harrison are almost as unlikely as their convenient occupations as junior high football coach and lawyer. Once his life improves, Harrison is sure his good fortune can't last and waits for his regular bad luck to recur. And it does, in the form of bone cancer that requires the amputation of his leg the week before his football team is set to compete in the state championship. Harrison's anger, frustration, and pain are tangible. The Kelly's friend, Major Bauer, who has a similar amputation, comes to train Harrison to deal with his handicap and redevelop his athletic prowess. While Major Bauer and Ms. Kelly argue about giving Harrison false hope that he can play football again, Harrison must find his own peace. Green's narration is well-paced and engaging. Although the story is melodramatic and stretches the suspension of disbelief, it will attract sports fans.—Janet Thompson, West Belmont Branch Library, Chicago Public Library, IL

School Library Journal

Gr 4–8—Harrison has spent his youth passed from one foster home to another. When he is rescued from an abusive couple and placed with the Kellys, things seem almost too good. Mr. Kelly is the JV football coach at Harrison's new secondary school, and Mrs. Kelly is a lawyer. They have always wanted a child of their own, and soon Harrison is calling her "Mom" and playing on Coach's team. In spite of his lack of football experience, he proves unstoppable on the field when he gets the ball in his hands. Not all of his teammates are happy about their new 13-year-old star, and when Leo intentionally injures him during a practice, it just makes Harrison more determined to play. The knee injury doesn't get better, though, and an MRI shows much more than a torn ligament: suddenly, Harrison is being treated for bone cancer. He goes through surgery, requiring the amputation of part of his leg, and then chemotherapy, and he vacillates between depression and anger. Helping him through it are Coach and Mrs. Kelly, as well as Coach's old Army buddy, Major Bauer, who lost a leg in the Gulf War. Even when Harrison wants to push his friends away, they rally around him, and he allows himself to dream of playing football again, inspired by real-life athlete and amputee Jeff Keith. In short chapters with cliff-hanger endings, Green clearly shows the difficulties that the teen overcomes, and the truly unstoppable spirit that resides within him. While the dialogue can be a little mawkish, this is a hopeful story that Green's fans will enjoy.—Kim Dare, Fairfax County Public Schools, VA

Kirkus Reviews

Harrison has led a hard-knock life up until he's taken in by loving foster parents "Coach" and Jennifer. After he inadvertently causes the man's death, Harrison is taken from a brutal foster home run by a farmer who uses foster kids as unpaid labor, a situation blithely ignored by the county. His new foster parents are different. Coach is in charge of the middle school football team, and all 13-year-old Harrison has ever wanted to do is to play football, the perfect outlet for his seething undercurrent of anger at life. Oversized for his age, he's brilliant at the game but also over-the-top aggressive, until a hit makes his knee start aching--and then life deals him another devastating blow. The pain isn't an injury but bone cancer. Many of the characters--loving friends Justin and Becky, bully Leo, a mean-spirited math teacher, cancer victim Marty and the major, an amputee veteran who comes to rehabilitate Harrison after life-changing surgery--are straight out of the playbook for maudlin middle-grade fiction. Nevertheless, this effort edges above trite because of well-depicted football scenes and the sheer force of Harrison himself. His altogether believable anger diminishes his likability but breathes life into an otherwise stock role. A predictable, fast-paced sports tale with some unexpected heart. (Fiction. 11-14)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169520910
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 09/18/2012
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 489,171
Age Range: 8 - 11 Years
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