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[Z757.Ebook] Free PDF Front and Center, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

Free PDF Front and Center, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

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Front and Center, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

Front and Center, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock



Front and Center, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

Free PDF Front and Center, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

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Front and Center, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

"After five months of sheer absolute craziness I was going back to being plain old background D.J. In photographs of course I'm always in the background...."

But it turns out other folks have big plans for D.J. Like her coach. College scouts. All the town hoops fans. A certain Red Bend High School junior who's keen for romance and karaoke. Not to mention Brian Nelson, who she should not be thinking about! Who she is done with, thank you very much. But who keeps showing up anyway....

  • Sales Rank: #66292 in Audible
  • Published on: 2010-02-17
  • Format: Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Running time: 358 minutes

Most helpful customer reviews

17 of 18 people found the following review helpful.
D.J. Schwenk, Quiet Star
By Kate Coombs
I happily set aside my usual diet of books about witches, shapechangers, and dragons when it comes to Catherine Murdock's YA novels about D.J. Schwenk. I'm also the kid that used to get hit in the head by the ball in any number of sports with names ending in -ball, but who cares? A good book is a good book, and the D.J. Schwenk books are very, very good: Dairy Queen, The Off Season, and now Front and Center.

D.J. is a tall, big-boned girl and a gifted athlete from a family of gifted athletes, but her family is not known for its communication skills. They aren't stupid, they're just not talkers. Her two older brothers are talented college football players. Her younger brother is athletic, too, though he talks so little that his teachers worry about him. In Dairy Queen, the coach of a rival high school sends his spoiled rich-boy quarterback to help out on the Schwenk farm, where D.J. is doing all of the work alone because her father has broken his hip. D.J. ends up coaching Brian Nelson in football, while he coaches her on the advantages of talking more. In The Off Season, D.J. plays high school football, and she and Brian begin to get closer. But D.J. realizes that Brian is ashamed to be seen in public with her. A lot of other things go wrong, but none of them seem to matter much when D.J.'s older brother Win suffers a very serious injury playing football. She drops everything to stand by him, coaching and cajoling him through rehab.

In this third book, Front and Center, we find that although D.J. has learned to open up more thanks to her now-defunct relationship with Brian, she is still not the type to take center stage. As she returns to playing high school basketball, she realizes that's exactly what her coach expects her to do: become a leader for the team. Heavily recruited by college basketball coaches, D.J. finds that everyone around her is pushing her to verbally commit to playing Big Ten college ball. But she pulls back, afraid she can't take the pressure. Meanwhile, she is dating her buddy Beaner, although she still finds herself thinking about Brian Nelson. Even as D.J. leans toward playing for a smaller college team, life and the people who care about her conspire to convince her that she's got too much going for her to settle for less--whether in dating or in basketball.

I cannot emphasize enough how authentic D.J.'s narrative voice is. Sometimes in YA, we meet an endless parade of main characters who seem to be channeling terribly clever urban 30-somethings with their banter and sarcasm. In contrast, D.J. is such a fresh combination of ordinary and extraordinary, the way real girls are, the ones you walk past every day. Listen to her frank and slightly funny voice at the beginning of Front and Center, when she mistakenly thinks she's going to able to stay out of the limelight and avoid trouble, including boys:

"But most of all--and this is what I was looking forward to the very, very most--I was done with all that boyfriend crap. Finished with the 24/7 Brian Nelson cable station that had been running nonstop inside my skull since July. No more feeling like I was some fluttery girl who doesn't have anything better to do all day long than think about her boyfriend. Because I did have better things to think about, thank you very much, because I am not the kind of girl who has boyfriends; I'm the kind who's just friends with boys, which is totally different and which I'm actually kind of good at. I'd pulled the plug on that Brian Nelson cable station for good.

That's why it felt so nice to be getting back to school. Because after five months I was back to being plain old background D.J. That's how I thought about it, anyway. In photographs of course I'm always in the background--it's a family joke, actually, that us Schwenk kids could go to school naked on picture day because we're all so crazy tall. But I mean that I was returning to the background of life. Where no one would really notice me or talk about me or even talk to me much except to say 'Nice shot,' and I could just hang out without too many worries at all."

It's a real gift to be able to watch D.J. struggle to grow into herself in Dairy Queen, The Off Season, and now Front and Center. Catherine Murdock is so adept that she even manages to let us know that D.J. will probably end up being an incredible basketball coach in ten or fifteen years. But this and other messages, such as the cow metaphor used so well in Dairy Queen, never call unnecessary attention to themselves. Which reminds me of D.J.'s own self-effacing style. Even so, D.J., the messages, and these three books still manage to shine. Read them, please. You will be very glad you got to know D.J. Schenk.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Sorry to say, but this was SO disappointing.
By Three Wishes
2 1/2 stars...I am so sorry to say, but this book was a huge disappointment for me. I felt like the DJ I came to know and love through the first 2 books was almost completely absent, and in her wake was a whiny, insecure human being.

Do you want to know how this book goes? I'll give you a short break down and save you reading the first 200 pages...I like Beaner and I'll make out with him, but I can't stop thinking about Brian. Oh Brian, why can't I get him out of my head when I should like Beaner because he isn't ashamed of me and treats me the way I should be treated. Why won't all of these colleges leave me alone? Why me? I feel so sorry for myself because everyone is pressuring me to choose a school and I just want to crawl into a hole and die. I can't believe I have to read all of these (hundreds of) letters that all of these colleges are sending me and want me to play for their school. It's totally not fair that everyone is bugging me about this. Why do they want me when I can't even open my mouth on the basketball court? I'm so pathetic and scared and not worthy.

This is pretty much the ENTIRE book. It just goes back and forth over and over and OVER again. No, I did not love Beaner. I found him to be pretty annoying actually. And after she described kissing him as akin to eating cow tongue...I mean that's just nasty. However, he DID treat her right. He wasn't ashamed of her, he wanted to take her out, he wasn't scared of his friends knowing he liked her...unlike BRIAN! I'm sorry, he didn't make it up to me in this one. He barely even tried to let DJ know he was still interested and most of the instigating (AGAIN) was on her part. He was okay by the end, but I'm glad we didn't get any big happy ending with them because I was so not ready to go there.

Now to the subject of DJ's insecurity. Yes, I'm sure any college seeking ball player would have some insecurity, but give me a break. Multiple colleges are fighting over this girl and she's feeling sorry for herself about it. It's really ridiculous. Especially when you have Ashley, her friend, who didn't make it in and it crushed her world. Poor DJ. You have so many full ride scholarships and we are supposed to feel compassion for this. Sorry, no.

I just thought it felt more like the author didn't know how to complete the series and so this book turned way more into teenage drama and angst than anything else. Even though DJ was in her head a lot in the other three books it wasn't tedious or annoying like it got in this one. The drama and angst weren't justified. In the first book? Yes. Having the responsibilities of the world on your shoulders because your family bailed on you and you are basically running the farm all by yourself and trying to juggle school and sports along with that and you don't want to end up a cow just doing what you are told? Totally a reason to think a lot about. In the second book with Win wanting to die after his accident? Totally justifiable. The third? No. I just didn't buy it. In fact, I was irritated almost the entire time.

Throughout all of the other books there was so much dialogue between all the characters, and that is something I loved. The connecting of characters. This installment lacked a lot of that connection, and I feel like the story suffered for it.

Over all it was just 'okay' for me. Apparently I'm in the minority, but I really missed the depth and character connection that other two books had. I missed the DJ I came to know and love who yes had some vulnerability, yes, but it never let it stop her. She would just power through. This one she just became so whiny I couldn't take it. I was disappointed. :(

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
I'm sad it's over!
By Tabitha
I loved Dairy Queen and The Off Season. DJ Schwenk is such an amazing character, and it's not because she's supergirl. It's because she's NOT.

DJ is starting the basketball season of her junior year, eager to get back to how things used to be before her relationship with Brian Nelson was exposed to the world - thus exposing her to the world. She'd like to get back to the background, thankyouverymuch, and had every intention of doing so. That is, until she walks into her coach's office right before the season begins.

This book is funny, light, and incredibly loveable. Her family is just as quirky as ever, her relationship with Brian Nelson is still weird, and she's still just as good at sports as she ever was. What's different? It's time for DJ to step forward and officially become what she's always been - a leader.

I loved how DJ 'coached' Brian in Dairy Queen. And I loved how DJ made Win see how important he was, even if he couldn't walk. These are traits of a leader, and yet DJ never stepped into that role. But in order for her to do what she wants, which is to leave Red Bend and see other parts of the world, that's exactly what she has to do. Front and Center is a wonderful story of DJ's journey, showing her dealing with her many faults, and seeing her step up to face her ultimate fear: the spotlight.

I have loved watching DJ grow into herself in this trilogy - since she's so big, it was a lot to grow into. :) I will miss DJ...

While this book isn't as strong as Dairy Queen, it's still a great book. This is definitely a good read for boys or girls, for teens of any age. Highly recommended.

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