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Summary of Holes by Louis Sachar

2023-08-27 06:57:53

HOLES LOUIS SACHAR Stanley Yelnats was cursed being a great grandfather following several generations of Yelnats, starting with his stolen rotten pig. Have you been convicted of Stanley as stealing Clyde? Sweet Feet 's responsible famous baseball player, Livingston, comes from sneakers at homeless shelters. This time he has to go to the detention center of the boy - Green Lake camp - a bad boy dig a hole every day, digging a hole of 5 feet wide and 5 feet daily, becoming a good boy . Camping Green Lake has no lake, but there are many holes.

Louis Sachar was born in New York on 20th March 1954. He is the author of American children's book. He wrote 24 books. Louis Sachar is best known for his series of books on the roadside school and the sideways story of the novel Kong. For the novel "Kong", Sahar awarded the "National People's Award" and "Newberry Medal". "Hole" was sold at a price of 5 million copies, became a movie in 2003. This book is written about a boy named Stanley Yelnats IV. He is said to be a very unhappy person due to family curse. He benefited from the charity auction and was accused of stealing a pair of sneakers belonging to the famous baseball player Clyde Livingstone, and the homeless was sent to Green Lake Camp.

Stanley Yernat is the protagonist of Louis Sachar's 1998 young adult novel Confucius. The hero is the fifth generation "Stanley Yernats". Stanley was accidentally accused of stolen tennis shoes owned by celebrities donated to an orphanage for children and was taken to the boy camp of all boys in the desert. A reformist adult leader dug a five foot hole on the beach with a criminal juvenile and asked him to try hard and try to cultivate their character. Indeed, corrupt managers are asking boys to make a hole so that they can find the buried treasure.

Hols was a 1998 adult mystery comedy novel, originally published by Farrar, Straus, Giroux. The book is developed mainly around unfortunate teenage boys named Stanley Yen That was stolen and sent to Camp Green Lake, a youth correction facility in the Texas Desert. The plot explores how regional history and behavior of past roles affected Stanley's current life. These interrelated stories cover topics such as racial discrimination, homelessness, illiteracy, negotiated marriage and so on.