The Cardturner
The Cardturner book cover

The Cardturner

Paperback – Illustrated, October 11, 2011

Price
$9.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
352
Publisher
Ember
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385736633
Dimensions
5.56 x 0.72 x 8.25 inches
Weight
9.6 ounces

Description

LOUIS SACHAR is the author of the New York Times #1 bestseller Holes and the award-winning Small Steps, as well as Stanley Yelnats' Survival Guide to Camp Green Lake . Louis Sachar is an avid bridge player. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1xa0xa0xa0xa0 My Favorite Unclexa0xa0xa0xa0 Ever since I was a little kid, I've had it drilled into me that my uncle Lester was my favorite uncle. My mother would thrust the phone at me and say, "Uncle Lester wants to talk to you," her voice infused with the same forced enthusiasm she used to describe the deliciousness of canned peas. "Tell him you love him."xa0xa0 "I love you, Uncle Lester," I'd say.xa0xa0 "Tell him he's your favorite uncle."xa0xa0 "You're my favorite uncle."xa0xa0 It got worse as I got older. I never knew what to say to him, and he never seemed all that interested in talking to me. When I became a teenager I felt silly telling him he was my favorite uncle, although my mother still urged me to do so. I'd say things like "Hey, how's it goin'?" and he'd grunt some response. He might ask me a question about school. I imagine it was a great relief to both of us when my mother took back the phone. Our brief conversations always left me feeling embarrassed, and just a little bit creepy.xa0xa0 He was actually my great-uncle, having been my mother's favorite uncle long before he was mine.xa0xa0 I didn't know how much money he had, but he was rich enough that he never had to be nice to anyone. Our favorite uncle never visited us, and I think my mother initiated all the phone conversations with him. Later, after he got really sick, he wouldn't even talk to her. My mother would call almost daily, but she could never get past his housekeeper. xa0 I had only met Uncle Lester face to face one time, at his sixty-fifth birthday party. I was six years old, and to me, his house seemed like a castle on a mountaintop. I said the obligatory "Happy birthday" and "I love you" and "You're my favorite uncle" and then steered clear of him.xa0xa0 "His heart is as cold as a brick," my father said on the drive home.xa0xa0 That phrase has stuck with me, I think, because my father used the word cold instead of hard.xa0xa0 My elementary school was a brick building. Every day on the way home, I would drag my fingers over the hard, and yes, cold surface.xa0xa0 I'm in high school now, but still whenever I walk by a brick building, I feel compelled to touch it. Even now, as I write this, I can almost feel the hard coolness, the sharp edges, and the roughness of the cement between the bricks.

Features & Highlights

  • "The Newbery-winning author of
  • Holes
  • fulfills a need the world probably didn't even know it had . . . for smart and puzzle-minded teens . . ."—
  • Booklist
  • The summer after junior year of high school looks bleak for Alton Richards. His girlfriend has dumped him, he has no money and no job, and his parents insist that he drive his great-uncle Lester, who is old, blind, very sick, and very rich, to his bridge club four times a week and be his cardturner.      But Alton's parents aren't the only ones trying to worm their way into Lester Trapp's good graces. There is Trapp's longtime housekeeper, his alluring young nurse, and the crazy Castaneda family.     Alton soon finds himself intrigued by his uncle, by the game of bridge, and especially by the pretty and shy Toni Castaneda, as he struggles to figure out what it all means, and ultimately to figure out the meaning of his own life.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(255)
★★★★
25%
(213)
★★★
15%
(128)
★★
7%
(60)
23%
(195)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

A Bridge Book

**Warning: spoilers**

Alton is a teenager who is living a difficult life. His parents don't trust him, even though he doesn't do anything wrong. His girlfriend ditched him for Cliff, his so-called best friend. And he also has no job-- so his parents make him call his uncle Lester Trapp, who they only like because of his money. He has to drive his blind uncle to bridge club four times a week. This book was written in first person perspective and it felt like a casual conversation, which I liked. It's not a challenging read, but it is full of "bridge gibberish". Although it isn't part of a series, I wish it was, so I could find out how Alton's bridge career turns out!
I learned a lot about the game of bridge, and even some about philosophical change. It was cool how the character Alton learned bridge, just like the reader did. I liked this book because it was filled with funny and weird scenes, like going to a national bridge tournament without getting parent permission. My favorite part was how at the tournament, no one recognized the names on the leadership board. However, it was very unexpected when Trapp died suddenly partway through the book, and Alton's greedy parents still keep trying to get his money (it didn't work). Also, it was hard to believe that Trapp could memorize all those different hands of cards!
This book would be good for 8th graders and up, due to some swear words and mature content. Don't be afraid to read it even if you don't like bridge, or are a new learner-- but if you're a novice and want to learn more, this can be a good book for you.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

humorous, engaging and on the money

I have fond memories of playing bridge with my grandparents so i wasn't at all intimidated by the topic- plus this is Louis Sachar writing for teenagers so i had high hopes. I wasn't disappointed. This is Sachar at his best chronicaling the growth and development of Alton Richards as he moves from awkward lovesick teenager into adulthood. No one does this better than Sachar and it is nice to see him addressing an older audience. Adults and teens will enjoy this book- and the fact that it uses bridge as a backdrop is largely irrelevant though as other reviewers have commented, it will probably serve to ignite a bridge revival. Why do i like Sachar? Because his books are engaging, humorous and truthful- they teach us something about human nature and ourselves. This one does all of that very well.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great

Very enjoyable, many laughs!
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Bridge lovers will love this!

This is a great book, even for adults - especially for those learning to play bridge! Really good story, and great bridge practice.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

not as a read aloud book ever

An amazing bridge player loses his sight and still plays top-level bridge so long as his "card turner" simply tells him the cards once. As the author agrees, this would be a pretty good book for people who play bridge. I don't, and it was still a 2 star. But I had hoped to read it aloud for a group that includes people with vision impairment, and the book fails bigtime as a read-aloud. Too many bridge diagrams, for one thing.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

NOT JUST FOR THE TEEN READERS

First heard about this book from a visiting friend; it sounded like a good read. After just a few pages, I thought, this book is for teens. I kept reading because I do share ideas for books with my teen grandchildren and besides I was really enjoying the story and the banter between the sister and the story teller, her brother. Then I forgot it was for teens because it was such fun to keep reading; I laughed out loud a few times. The bridge was fun too, even though I am a weekly bridge player and often play duplicate bridge. I passed this book on to my granddaughters and they too liked reading it. When the family was flying home from a vacation, my son picked up the book, curious to see why the girls were laughing and what they were discussing. He is not a bridge player but he also found the story fun and a good read. Although I still can't recruit this group to take up the wonderful game of bridge at least now they are getting curious. The author has won many awards for his children's books. Now I know why!
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Held my interest until the end.

I found it wonderfully amazing that a story with bridge lessons interspersed within it kept my interest. It is a wonderful story about growing up. My granddaughters introduced me to this author and I look forward to reading his other works.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

So Good

Recommended to me. I have shared it with several Bridge Buddies. Can't wait to share it with others. Excellent. Read this!
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Disappointing

I'm usually a big fan of Louis Sachar and so it killed me to give this book a two-star review. First off, add a star or two if you understand how bridge is played. There were lots of dense descriptions of play that were impossible for this non-bridge player to follow, and by the end of the book I was just skipping those parts, which isn't something I want to have to do when I read a book, even with the author's blessing. But bridge aside, Sachar didn't do nearly as good of job of walking the line between natural and supernatural as he has in other books, so the third act of the book wasn't set up well and didn't ring true in spite of the well-drawn characters.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

fun insightful bridge read

"alton's rule" is brilliant