Book Hole

Book Hole




💣 👉🏻👉🏻👉🏻 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻






















































Возможно, сайт временно недоступен или перегружен запросами. Подождите некоторое время и попробуйте снова.
Если вы не можете загрузить ни одну страницу – проверьте настройки соединения с Интернетом.
Если ваш компьютер или сеть защищены межсетевым экраном или прокси-сервером – убедитесь, что Firefox разрешён выход в Интернет.


Время ожидания ответа от сервера en.wikipedia.org истекло.


Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read.


Start by marking “Holes (Holes, #1)” as Want to Read:



Stanley Yelnats is under a curse. A curse that began with his no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing-great-great-grandfather and has since followed generations of Yelnats. Now Stanley has been unjustly sent to a boys’ detention center, Camp Green Lake, where the boys build character by spending all day, every day digging holes exactly five feet wide and five feet deep. There is
Stanley Yelnats is under a curse. A curse that began with his no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing-great-great-grandfather and has since followed generations of Yelnats. Now Stanley has been unjustly sent to a boys’ detention center, Camp Green Lake, where the boys build character by spending all day, every day digging holes exactly five feet wide and five feet deep. There is no lake at Camp Green Lake. But there are an awful lot of holes. It doesn’t take long for Stanley to realize there’s more than character improvement going on at Camp Green Lake. The boys are digging holes because the warden is looking for something. But what could be buried under a dried-up lake? Stanley tries to dig up the truth in this inventive and darkly humorous tale of crime and punishment—and redemption.
...more



Published
September 2nd 2000
by Scholastic


(first published August 20th 1998)



To ask other readers questions about
Holes ,
please sign up .



Dorry Pease


I personally think that the characters Sacher brings into the story are a telling reason why it IS so interesting. Sacher has the ability in most of h …more I personally think that the characters Sacher brings into the story are a telling reason why it IS so interesting. Sacher has the ability in most of his stories [and there are a lot of them around different characters, humorous and serious] to use a common thread. In the case of HOLES, there are two threads. One thread is the main character, Stanley, and the other thread is the HOLE itself. With these two threads, Sacher, tells us Stanley's life and his discovery of what "truth' really means. Of course, these are just my thoughts. Dorry C Pease (less)




Liz


IMO the movie is an excellent book adaptation because they stay very close to the book. They kept the plot and characters the same, sometimes even usi …more IMO the movie is an excellent book adaptation because they stay very close to the book. They kept the plot and characters the same, sometimes even using direct quotes from the book. I think the benefit to reading in addition to reading is that you get more of the character's inner thoughts and monologues. Stanley particularly is a little bit different reading from his perspective. Just watching the movie you also miss out on a lot of Sachar's style and cleverness. If you liked to movie, the book is a great next step. (less)



 · 
1,041,940
ratings
 · 
21,879
reviews



All Languages Bahasa Indonesia ‎(7)
Català ‎(1)
Dansk ‎(3)
Deutsch ‎(47)
Eesti ‎(5)
English ‎(20240)
Español ‎(102)
Français ‎(13)
Italiano ‎(11)
Latine ‎(1)
Latviešu valoda ‎(1)
Lietuvių kalba ‎(3)
Magyar ‎(2)
Nederlands ‎(9)
Norsk ‎(2)
Polski ‎(1)
Português ‎(5)
Pусский язык ‎(1)
Română ‎(18)
Slovenčina ‎(2)
Slovenščina ‎(1)
Suomi ‎(24)
Svenska ‎(21)
Tiếng Việt ‎(45)
Türkçe ‎(8)
Íslenska ‎(2)
česky, čeština ‎(3)
Ελληνικά ‎(1)
български език ‎(5)
українська ‎(2)
العربية ‎(21)
فارسی ‎(23)
বাংলা ‎(1)
ไทย ‎(12)
ქართული ‎(4)
中文 ‎(1)
日本語 ‎(2)
한국어 ‎(2)

Start your review of Holes (Holes, #1)

Shelves:
series ,
middle-grade ,
children-s ,
read-in-2012




I am very sad that I never read this as a young person, because I think that I would have loved it even more than I do now. I think that it probably would have blown my mind. I have to applaud Louis Sachar for being so courageous in a children’s novel. Effortlessly weaving together the past, present, and ancient history of these characters, Mr. Sachar examines the impact of our history and the nature of hope and human compassion, all while maintaining a light, humorous quality. This is a book for
I am very sad that I never read this as a young person, because I think that I would have loved it even more than I do now. I think that it probably would have blown my mind. I have to applaud Louis Sachar for being so courageous in a children’s novel. Effortlessly weaving together the past, present, and ancient history of these characters, Mr. Sachar examines the impact of our history and the nature of hope and human compassion, all while maintaining a light, humorous quality. This is a book for children, but one that never speaks down to children. It is both mature and youthful. Stanley is tried and convicted for a crime that he didn’t commit, sent to a reform camp for boys, and forced to work day after day in the hot sun digging holes – without any hope of aid. He’s treated callously and unfairly, but he must learn to keep going, get along with the boys around him, and survive. This is not a book that promises (like so many other children’s books do) success and rewards for good behavior, for choosing all the right paths. That’s not what real living, real maturity is all about. It’s about learning to deal with adversity and tragedy and failure when they come – because they will. It’s about making the right choices even when there are no rewards, no promised successes, simply because they’re right. And more than that – it’s about choosing kindness and compassion, even when everything around you is hard and unfair. The only part of this novel that I don’t quite like is the ending, which seems to undermine the more realistic quality of the rest of the novel. I wish that Stanley and Hector could survive happily without a fairy tale ending, because after all of that, they know that they don’t need one to be happy. But I think that as a child, I would have enjoyed seeing them win the day. Perfect Musical Pairing Brett Dennen – Darlin’ Do Not Fear This is a very sweet song about growing up and holding onto hope during the hard times. Your confidence is faultless your faith etched in stone and neither could comfort you from the wild unknown So bury your burning hatred like a hatchet in the snow Darlin' do not fear what you don't really know Also seen on The Readventurer . Stop by for a comparison of this book to the movie version!
...more




flag





287 likes · Like
 · see review


Shelves:
literature ,
fiction ,
20th-century ,
childrens-young-readers ,
united-states




Holes (Holes, #1), Louis Sachar Holes is a 1998 young adult mystery comedy novel written by Louis Sachar and first published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Stanley Yelnats IV is a 14-year-old boy from a hard-working but poor family. Stanley's latest stroke of misfortune occurs when he is wrongfully convicted of stealing a pair of athletic shoes that belonged to the famous baseball player Clyde "Sweet Feet" Livingston, who donated the shoes for a charity auction. He is sent to Camp Green Lake, a j
Holes (Holes, #1), Louis Sachar Holes is a 1998 young adult mystery comedy novel written by Louis Sachar and first published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Stanley Yelnats IV is a 14-year-old boy from a hard-working but poor family. Stanley's latest stroke of misfortune occurs when he is wrongfully convicted of stealing a pair of athletic shoes that belonged to the famous baseball player Clyde "Sweet Feet" Livingston, who donated the shoes for a charity auction. He is sent to Camp Green Lake, a juvenile corrections facility which is located in the middle of a desert; the lake dried up decades ago and is crawling with highly venomous yellow-spotted lizards, whose bites are always lethal. The inmates are assigned to dig one cylindrical hole each day, five feet wide and five feet deep, which the Warden claims "builds their character". The novel alternates this story with two set in the past, with interrelated but distinct plot lines. ... عنوانها: «آخرین گودال»؛ «راز گودالهای دریاچه سبز»؛ «گودالها»؛ نویسنده: لوئیس ساکر (سکر)؛ تاریخ نخستین خوانش روز بیست و یکم ماه سپتامبر سال 2009میلادی عنوان: آخرین گودال؛ نویسنده: لوئیس ساکر؛ مترجم: حسن ابراهیمی (الوند)؛ تهران، قدیانی، 1379؛ در 280ص، مصور؛ شابک ایکس - 964417335؛ چاپ دوم 1381؛ چاپ سوم 1382؛ چاپ چهارم 1388؛ شابک 9789644173356؛ چاپهای ششم و هفتم 1389؛ موضوع داستانهای نویسندگان امریکایی - سده 20م عنوان: گودالها؛ نویسنده: لوئیس ساکر (سکر)؛ مترجم: فرزاد فربد؛ تهران، کتاب پنجره؛ 1383، در 186ص، چاپ دیگر تهران، انتشارات پریان؛ 1393؛ در 227ص؛ شابک 9786007058114؛ چاپ دوم 1396؛ عنوان: راز گودالهای دریاچه سبز؛ نویسنده: لوئیس ساکر؛ مترجم: مهدی باتقوا؛ تهران، رسپینا، 1392، در 248ص؛ شابک 9789648559132؛ چاپ دوم 1392؛ استنلی را برای گناهی که انجام نداده است، به اردوگاه «گرین لیک» میفرستند؛ او همانند دیگر نوجوانان ساکن اردوگاه، او نیز وادار میشود تا هر روز زیر آفتاب داغ، گودالی به ژرفا و پهنای یک متر و نیم، بکـَـنـَـد؛ سرپرست اردوگاه باور دارد، که کندن گودال، باعث شکل گرفتن شخصیت نوجوانان بزهکار میشود؛ اما «استنلی» به زودی میفهمد، که موضوع فراتر از «شکل گرفتن شخصیت» نوجوانان بزهکار است؛ او کوشش میکند هرطور شده، از ماجرا سر دربیاورد؛ و ...؛ کتاب برنده ی جوایز «نیوبری سال 1999میلادی»، «ادگار آلن پو سال 1999میلادی»، «نشنال بوک در ادبیات کودک و نوجوان»، «بهترین کتاب سال به انتخاب اسکول لایبرری ژورنال»، «بهترین کتاب نوجوانان به انتخاب انجمن کتابداران آمریکا»، «بهترین کتاب سال به انتخاب پابلیشرز ویکلی»، و «برنده ی پر فروشترین کتاب نوجوانان» است تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 10/09/1399هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی
...more




flag





147 likes · Like
 · see review


Shelves:
kids ,
coming-of-age ,
weird ,
fantasy ,
fun




This book is so much fun! I used to take clippings from magazines with book reviews, found an old clipping about this book cleaning up the house recently and thought... mmm... let's read this one. Timing was impeccable. I went through an explosive challenging period of really hard work and high pressure in the office and this book made me look forward to reading if only a few pages when coming home. A quirky funny story about a boy called Stanley who is sent to 'Green Camp Lake', a boy's detenti
This book is so much fun! I used to take clippings from magazines with book reviews, found an old clipping about this book cleaning up the house recently and thought... mmm... let's read this one. Timing was impeccable. I went through an explosive challenging period of really hard work and high pressure in the office and this book made me look forward to reading if only a few pages when coming home. A quirky funny story about a boy called Stanley who is sent to 'Green Camp Lake', a boy's detention center after supposedly having stolen a pair of sports shoes from a famous basketball player. Being innocent, he blaims his no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing great-great-grandfather who ran into a curse which affected Stanley's family over years and years. Camp Green Lake is in the middle of the desert, a dried up lake, and every day a scary ward and guards, amongst who a 'Mr Sir', make the boys dig holes there. So, what's going on?....I had so much fun with this book, excellently written and the story... who can make it up? All factors combined, also the timing of this book in my life, right book at the right time, couldn't be better. A sympathetic enjoyable story, really quirky and just pure FUN. Recommended! ps: Curious about the movie too, never saw it (yet).
...more




flag





91 likes · Like
 · see review


Shelves:
2010 ,
reviewed




Funny story: I'm trying to shelve this book, and can't remember if it had been banned (but I thought it had - google confirmed). At the same time, my friend Allison and I are chatting on Google Chat, and she starts ranting about how ridiculous book banning is (an opinion with which I agree wholeheartedly). Anyway, the conversation went like this: me: Is Holes a banned book? I can't remember allison: dunno... the whole concept of banned books is stupid. I mean, you could find a reason to gripe abo
Funny story: I'm trying to shelve this book, and can't remember if it had been banned (but I thought it had - google confirmed). At the same time, my friend Allison and I are chatting on Google Chat, and she starts ranting about how ridiculous book banning is (an opinion with which I agree wholeheartedly). Anyway, the conversation went like this: me: Is Holes a banned book? I can't remember allison: dunno... the whole concept of banned books is stupid. I mean, you could find a reason to gripe about any book me: yes, I agree allison: I think The Replacement should be banned because there is a scene talking about knives in the kitchen allison: VIOLENCE me: haha just wait allison: and he sits on his roof allison: DANGEROUS BEHAVIOR allison: RECKLESS me: He says the F word, and there are BOOBIES! allison: PORNOGRAPHY me: IMMORALITY! allison: lol allison: or you could go the other way and be totally ridiculous allison: Holes doesn't directly support a gay lifestyle allison: BAN IT me: But it does... allison: oh well then uh... me: all those boys are in and out of holes all day long Needless to say, there was laughter. Sometimes I crack myself up. Anyway, all witty repartee aside, I really liked this book. I have no idea why it would have been banned unless it was because a kid hits a jerk in the face with a shovel for being a complete ass to him day in and day out? That's probably it. ENCOURAGING VIOLENT BEHAVIOR AND DISRESPECT FOR AUTHORITY! BAN IT! I loved Stanley, but in all truth, I loved Zero more. He was the star of this show for me. I wanted everything to work out for him, and I was on pins and needles worrying about him when things started to go bad for him. I mean, these kids committed crimes, or at least they were accused of committing crimes, but they weren't BAD or EVIL. Punishment is one thing, but the kind of things that these kids were made to do is nothing short of abuse. And what's sad is that probably isn't a far stretch from what really happens - although probably for different reasons. I enjoyed how the three different storylines all came together in this one, and seeing the little bits of each one felt like discovering a gem. I'd have this, "OH!" moment each time something was revealed that linked something else... Really fun to read. I really enjoyed this one, and I look forward to seeing the movie soon, since I hear from Allison that it's fabulous. :)
...more




flag





77 likes · Like
 · see review


Shelves:
nenia-recommends ,
you-can-watch-it-on-the-telly ,
best-young-adult-books ,
literary-sad-girl-canon ,
ya-ya-land






Instagram || Twitter || Facebook || Amazon || Pinterest I'm doing this project where I reread books I enjoyed when I was younger. I've read and reread HOLES several times over the course of my life and every time I enjoyed it in a different way. It's such a compelling story and I think one of the best things about it is how everything ties into everything else and it all comes full circle. Stanley Yelnats, whose first name is his last name backwards, is sent to "Camp Green Lake" when he has th


Instagram || Twitter || Facebook || Amazon || Pinterest I'm doing this project where I reread books I enjoyed when I was younger. I've read and reread HOLES several times over the course of my life and every time I enjoyed it in a different way. It's such a compelling story and I think one of the best things about it is how everything ties into everything else and it all comes full circle. Stanley Yelnats, whose first name is his last name backwards, is sent to "Camp Green Lake" when he has the misfortune of being in the wrong place at the wrong time and is accused of theft. The camp isn't actually a camp, but one of those punishment retreats that disciplines kids with back-breaking physical labor. In this case, the boys dig holes in the desert under the hot sun, 5ft wide, 5ft deep. The logic being that if you take a bad boy and make him dig holes all day, it turns him into a good boy. Seems like Republican logic to me. Stanley meets the other campers, who are pretty ethnically diverse, but the one he ends up closest to is a young Black man named "Zero." Everyone treats Zero like he's stupid because he's quiet and functionally illiterate, but there is actually a lot more to him going on to anyone who actually takes the time to get to know him, as Stanley finds out. There's a ton of other stuff, too. You get to learn about the history of Green Lake and how it was once a prosperous Western settlement with an actual lake. You get to learn the tragic history of Stanley's no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing-great-great-grandfather. And you even get to learn about the mysterious Warden of the camp and why hole-digging ended up being the de facto punishment for the boys. By the end of the book, everything comes full circle in an incredibly satisfying way. I enjoyed this book just as much as I did the first time I read it, and finished it in a single sitting. The language is not particularly complex but it paints an interesting picture of morality and justice and I liked that no one in the story was really pure good or pure evil (well-- with some exceptions). It ends up being a critique of the justice system and an interesting cautionary tale of how small actions can have large-scale effects. Definitely a must-read for al
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holes_(novel)
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/38709.Holes
Russian Escort Girl
Mom Love Fuck Sons
Russian Fuck Pornhub
Holes (novel) - Wikipedia
Holes (Holes, #1) by Louis Sachar - Goodreads
Holes Louis Sachar - hayatschool.com
The Book With a Hole by Hervé Tullet - Goodreads
The Hole: A Novel: Pyun, Hye-young, Kim-Russell, Sora ...
The Book with a Hole: Tullet, Hervé: 9781854379467: Amazon ...
Holes by Louis Sachar.pdf - Google Docs
Holes free to read online - bookscool.com
What Is the Climax of the Book "Holes"? - Reference.com
Holes Summary | GradeSaver
Book Hole


Report Page