Garvey's Choice

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Authors: Nikki Grimes

BOOK: Garvey's Choice
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Text copyright © 2016 by Nikki Grimes

All rights reserved.

For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book,
contact
[email protected]
.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and
incidents are products of the author's imagination
or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events,
locales, or persons, living or dead,
is entirely coincidental.

WordSong

An Imprint of Highlights

815 Church Street

Honesdale, Pennsylvania 18431

Printed in the United States of America

ISBN: 978-1-62979-740-3 (hc)

ISBN: 978-1-62979-747-2 (e-book)

Library of Congress Control Number: 2016932155

First hardcover edition, 2016

First e-book edition, 2016

The text of this book is set in Bembo.

H1.1

Design by Barbara Grzeslo

Production by Sue Cole

For Deborah Taylor

and all librarians

who labor on behalf of

our children

C
ONTENTS

It Figures

Origami

Angie

Summer Lost and Found

Stars

Sci-Fi Novel

Mom Speaks

Antidote

Rhymes with Harvey

Unique

Portrait

Perfect

Joe

Best Friend

Knock-Knock

Me and Joe

Alien

Tuesday

Phone Call

Dance with My Father

Saturday Play

In the Next Room

Sunday Dinner

September

Checkmate

Dressing for School

Day One

Too-Skinny-for-Words

Day Two

Foiled

Second Period

Short Week

Dinner

Drop In

Shoulder-Pad Season

Late-Night Snack

Shadow

Diet

Stealthy Dresser

Secret

Fun Run

Limits

A Slice of Truth

Photo Album

Luther's Sad Song, Again

Morning Classes

Who Says?

Second Thoughts

Fear

Turtle

Busted

Shift

Getting in the Groove

Garvey's Choice

Lighter than Air

Pact

First Warm-Ups

Chorus Calamity

Emmanuel

Saturday Catch-up

It's Manny, Now

No Words Needed

Careful, Now

Eliana

Where'd That Come From?

Advice

His Words

Come to Think of It

Name Game

Perks

Weekend Wonder: Manny's Spicy Portobello Burger Supreme

Rehearsal

Three Bears

Natasha Bedingfield Sings My Song

When I Sing

A Spoonful of Song

High School Half Day

Announcement

Manny's Turn to be Brave

Practice

Word Web

Preparation

Scales

The Change Bell

Insult

Good Company

Facing the Mirror

Assembly

Let Down

Thanks for the Push

Aftermath

New Fan

Compliments

Less than Perfect

Introductions

Too Soon Good-bye

On the Move

Spring Thaw

Colors

Turn Around

Now It's My Turn

First Contact

The Talk

Summer Duet

Tanka

Acknowledgments

I
T
F
IGURES

When I was seven

and crazy for Mr. Spock,

a
Star Trek
lunch box

was all I craved. Instead, Dad

bought one blaring the logo

of some football team

I'd never even heard of.

I shoved that thing in

the coal black of my closet,

then celebrated with cake.

O
RIGAMI

Mom's got a talent

for origami, but she

can't fold me into

the jock Dad wants me to be.

At least, she knows not to try.

A
NGIE

Angie's the athlete.

Why should I compete with her?

“Why can't Garvey be

like his sister?” I heard Dad

ask when I was eight. Mom said,

“That's the wrong question.

Ask Garvey what interests
him
.

Talk to him, honey.”

Yeah, Dad,
I thought.
Talk to me
.

But will he? I wish I knew.

S
UMMER
L
OST AND
F
OUND

Stories are breadcrumbs.

Just follow the trail of books

and you will find me

lost among the galaxies

of scorched stars and ships to Mars.

S
TARS

Stars on my ceiling

wink at me when the full moon

comes for a visit.

I might return the favor

someday, at least in my dreams.

For now, I strap on

chapter four of
Mars Rescue
,

study the console,

then ease back on the throttle

for a smooth flight through star fields.

S
CI
-F
I
N
OVEL

On page 59,

I meet two red Martian Trills

and feel a sweet chill

ripple through me, till Dad says,

“Football would do you better.”

Where did he come from?

The sudden slap of words sends

my Trills scattering.

I snarl and pound my pillow.

It's too late to slam the door.

M
OM
S
PEAKS

Later, Mom asks him,

“Why don't you let Garvey be?”

I hear Dad snort. Twice.

“Why can't he put those books down,

play football or basketball?”

“Garvey likes to read.

When was that not a good thing?”

“Thanks, Mom,” I whisper.

“You're right,” says Dad. “But reading

doesn't build muscles, does it?

When I was his age,

my pop and I always played.

We roughhoused like, well—normal.”

I go downstairs, grab a Coke,

wash down Dad's disappointment.

A
NTIDOTE

Dinner-table talk

is magically washed away

on a sea of song

the minute I clamp on my

trusty earphones and push PLAY.

R
HYMES WITH
H
ARVEY

Some people wonder:

Why Garvey? Why not Marcus?

So I asked my dad.

“Lots of boys named Marcus, son.

Garvey?
That's
one of a kind.”

U
NIQUE

How good is different?

I search stories for someone

who resembles me.

If it weren't for books and Joe,

“different” would just be lonely.

P
ORTRAIT

In Angela's eyes,

I'm little baby brother.

I tell her, “You're not

as much older as you think.”

She spatters me with laughter.

P
ERFECT

Mom says I'm perfect.

Dad says I'm football-ready,

whatever that means.

Angela calls me Sweet Chunk.

“But I still love you,” she says.

J
OE

Joe caught me dancing

in first grade, during recess,

out back by the slide,

alone—or so I thought, till

Joe showed up and joined right in.

Seems funny now, 'cause

there was no music playing

and neither of us

minded or needed any.

We were our own melody.

We went back to class,

each waiting for the other

to spill his secret

for a laugh. But we didn't.

That's how we knew we'd be friends.

B
EST
F
RIEND

I like Joe's Garvey:

clever on the pitcher's mound,

wicked-smart in math,

number one at knock-knock jokes.

Do friends make better mirrors?

K
NOCK
-K
NOCK

Here's Joe's knock-knock joke:

Joe: “Knock, knock.” I say, “Who's there?”

“Orange.” “Orange who?”

“Orange you going to ask

me in?” I laugh every time.

Mine's better: “Knock, knock.”

“Who's there?” “Orange.” “Orange who?”

“Wait. Knock, knock.” “Who's there?”

“Banana.” “Banana who?”

“Orange you dying to know!”

M
E AND
J
OE

With window cracked wide,

we telescope the night sky

trailing Orion,

dreaming of supernovas,

mapping the stars for hours.

A
LIEN

Over breakfast, Dad

eyes me like an alien

never seen before.

Sometimes, I could swear that he's

hoping to make first contact.

T
UESDAY

Excitement beaming

from Dad's face, he bounces in,

palms a basketball.

“Look what I got for you, son!

Want to go work up a sweat?”

Who's he talking to?

After all these years, you'd think

he'd start to know me.

Will he ever stop trying

to make me someone I'm not?

P
HONE
C
ALL

All evening long, I

try tucking in my sadness,

but it keeps getting

snagged on my voice when I speak.

Joe catches it when he calls.

“Hey! What's up?” Joe asks.

Should I tell him? “Nothing you

haven't heard before.

I wish my dad could see me.

That sounds crazy, huh?”

“Not really,” says Joe.

“I get it. Seriously.

But you've
got
a dad.

Mine skipped out long time ago.”

Why'd I open my big mouth?

Joe shrugs off his hurt.

“Knock, knock!” he says. “Not now, Joe.”

“Come on, man! Knock, knock.”

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