Hooray! My Butt Left the Bench! #10

Part of Here's Hank

Illustrated by Scott Garrett
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Paperback
$7.99 US
| $10.99 CAN
On sale Aug 01, 2017 | 128 Pages | 9781101995860
Age 6-8 years | Grades 1-3
Reading Level: Lexile 600L | Fountas & Pinnell O
In this winning addition to the easy-to-read bestselling series, Hank has to hustle to prove he can be his basketball team’s secret weapon!

For two years running, Hank's school has beaten their arch rivals at the annual second grade basketball game. When his friends try out, Hank is determined to play, too. There's just one problem: Hank is terrible at basketball. Luckily Dr. Dunk (AKA Hank's dad) and Hank's friends have his back. With a little help, Hank just might be what the team needs to win their first three-peat in PS 87 history!

This bestselling series written by Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver is perfect for the transitional reader. With a unique, easy-to-read font, endless humor, and characters every kid would want to be friends with, any story with Hank is a slam dunk!
Chapter 1
 
“I have a great idea,” I said to my best friends, Frankie Townsend and Ashley Wong. “After school today, let’s put on a worm race. Not just any worm race. The First-Ever Hank Zipzer Uphill Worm Sprint.”
 
It was Taco Tuesday, and we were in our school lunchroom eating—you guessed it—tacos. I like mine with no onions.
 
“Two problems,” Frankie said, his mouth full of cheese and beans. “Number one: Worms are slow and slimy.”
 
“Yeah,” Ashley agreed. “It’s so gross when they leave that icky slime trail.”
 
“No, slime is good,” I said. “The trail will give us proof of which worm crosses the finish line first.”
 
“Okay, Zip, I’ll give you that,” Frankie said. “But we still have problem number two. Where are we going to find these speedy worms?”
 
“I’ve got that solved,” I said. “I saw three of them sticking their heads out of the dirt in the planter in front of our building this morning. They were practically begging me to let them race. I bet they’ll be there after school.”
 
Ashley and Frankie gave each other a weird look.
 
“Actually, Hank,” Ashley said slowly. “Frankie and I are busy after school today.”
 
“Busy doing what? The three of us always do an after-school activity together.”
 
“Listen, Zip,” Frankie said, putting his hot-sauce-covered hand on my shoulder. “Ashley and I have been asked to be on the second-grade basketball team. The one that’s going to play PS 91 in our yearly game.” 
 
That totally took me by surprise.
 
“Really?” I said. “How come I didn’t hear about this?”
 
Ashley pushed her sparkly purple glasses up on her nose.
 
“Well,” she said, “they only asked the kids who are really good at basketball in gym class. Anyone else who wants to be on the team can come to tryouts. There are still some open spots.”
 
I was quiet as her words bounced around in my brain like a Ping-Pong ball. Frankie knew what I was thinking.
 
“Hey, don’t feel bad, Zip,” he said. “They only asked certain kids because this is a really important game. Our school has beaten PS 91 two years in a row. If we win this year, it will be a three-peat. The first three-peat ever in the whole history of PS 87!”
 
“But I want to play, too,” I said. “It says right on my report card that I play well with others.”
 
“You sure do, Zip. But you have to admit, you’re not that great at basketball.”
 
“What exactly are you saying, Frankie? That I’m short?”
 
“No, that’s not it,” Frankie said. “Look at Ashley. She’s short and she’s on the team.”
 
Ouch, that hurt.
 
“I’m not short,” Ashley said. “I like to think of myself as vertically challenged.”
 
“Me too,” I said. “I’m going to ask the coach if I can try out.”
 
“Why not?” Ashley said. “It never hurts to try. If you don’t, you’ll never know.”
 
“Okay, I’m going to do it. By the way, who is the coach?”
 
“Ms. Adolf,” Ashley said, “the fourth-grade teacher.”
 
I felt my throat tighten up, then the rest of my body followed.
 
“You mean the one who looks like she swallowed a lemon?” I squeaked.
 
“Yup,” Frankie answered. “Old sourpuss herself.”
 
That wasn’t what I wanted to hear. It was hard enough to ask to be on a team that nobody wanted you on. But now I was going to have to ask the meanest teacher on the whole planet Earth. Just looking at Ms. Adolf scared me down to my bones. Her hair was gray. Her clothes were gray. Her face was gray. Even her breath was gray.
 
“Hey, look,” Ashley said, pointing across the room. “Ms. Adolf is on lunch patrol. She’s standing over there by the desserts, making sure no one takes one.”
 
“Go talk to her now, Zip,” Frankie said, giving me a push. “Tell her you want to be on the team.”
 
I got to my feet, walked over to Ms. Adolf, and gave her my best Zipzer smile. She did not smile back.
 
“Don’t even think about taking one of these desserts,” she barked at me. “It will rot your teeth and ruin your brain.”
 
“Actually, Ms. Adolf, I’m here to talk basketball. I’d like to try out for the second-grade team that you’re coaching.”
 
She pulled her gray glasses down on her gray nose and stared at me like I was a flea that just fell off a dog.
 
“Can you shoot?” she asked.
 
“No.”
 
“Can you rebound?”
 
“No.”
 
“Can you jump high?”
 
“No.”
 
“Can you dribble?”
 
“Only from my mouth,” I said. Then I cracked up. But not Ms. Adolf. She just sighed heavily. 
 
“There will be an open tryout this afternoon at three, in the gym,” she said. “I’ve already selected four players for the team. But I can add five more to round out the roster. You can come then, but don’t get your hopes up.”
 
“Great, I’ll be there,” I said. “You’ll see. I’m going to surprise you.”
 
As I walked away, I felt pretty good, and my hopes were up . . . until I suddenly realized that I had nothing to surprise her with. Not one thing.
 
I had to come up with something. And fast.
 
 
Chapter 2 


Four Ways I Could Surprise Ms. Adolf at Basketball Tryouts
 
by Hank Zipzer
 
1. I could arrive in a full bunny suit with ears and a fluffy cottontail. (This has nothing to do with basketball, but boy, would that surprise Ms. Adolf.)
 
2. I could buy two tiny ladders and tie them to the bottom of my feet to make myself taller. (That would surprise everyone, including me, because there’s no such thing as a tiny-ladder store.)
 
3. I could make ten slam dunks in a row. (Not only would that surprise Ms. Adolf, it would surprise the entire solar system, including everybody on Neptune.)
 
4. There is no number four. Sorry, I’m not good at counting.
Henry Winkler is an acomplished actor, producer, and director. He is most well known for playing The Fonz on the American sitcom Happy Days. In 2003, Henry added author to his list of acheivements as he coauthored a series of children's books. Inspired by the true life experiences of Henry Winkler, whose undiagnosed dyslexia made him a classic childhood underachiever, the Hank Zipzer series is based on the high-spirited and funny adventures of a boy with learning differences. Henry is married to Stacey Weitzman and they have three children. View titles by Henry Winkler
Lin Oliver is a children’s book author and writer/producer of numerous television series and movies for children. With Henry Winkler, she writes the New York Times bestselling book series, Hank Zipzer: World’s Best Underachiever, which has sold over 4 million copies and is a hit television series on the BBC. Their new chapter book series, Here’s Hank, is also a New York Times bestseller.  She is also the author of the Who Shrunk Daniel Funk quartet, Sound Bender and The Shadow Mask, adventure/science fiction middle grade novels she coauthored with Theo Baker. Her collection of poetry, the highly praised Little Poems for Tiny Ears, illustrated by Tomie dePaola, is being followed with another poetry collection, Steppin’ Out: Playful Rhymes for Toddler Times. Oliver is the cofounder and Executive Director of SCBWI.  View titles by Lin Oliver

About

In this winning addition to the easy-to-read bestselling series, Hank has to hustle to prove he can be his basketball team’s secret weapon!

For two years running, Hank's school has beaten their arch rivals at the annual second grade basketball game. When his friends try out, Hank is determined to play, too. There's just one problem: Hank is terrible at basketball. Luckily Dr. Dunk (AKA Hank's dad) and Hank's friends have his back. With a little help, Hank just might be what the team needs to win their first three-peat in PS 87 history!

This bestselling series written by Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver is perfect for the transitional reader. With a unique, easy-to-read font, endless humor, and characters every kid would want to be friends with, any story with Hank is a slam dunk!

Excerpt

Chapter 1
 
“I have a great idea,” I said to my best friends, Frankie Townsend and Ashley Wong. “After school today, let’s put on a worm race. Not just any worm race. The First-Ever Hank Zipzer Uphill Worm Sprint.”
 
It was Taco Tuesday, and we were in our school lunchroom eating—you guessed it—tacos. I like mine with no onions.
 
“Two problems,” Frankie said, his mouth full of cheese and beans. “Number one: Worms are slow and slimy.”
 
“Yeah,” Ashley agreed. “It’s so gross when they leave that icky slime trail.”
 
“No, slime is good,” I said. “The trail will give us proof of which worm crosses the finish line first.”
 
“Okay, Zip, I’ll give you that,” Frankie said. “But we still have problem number two. Where are we going to find these speedy worms?”
 
“I’ve got that solved,” I said. “I saw three of them sticking their heads out of the dirt in the planter in front of our building this morning. They were practically begging me to let them race. I bet they’ll be there after school.”
 
Ashley and Frankie gave each other a weird look.
 
“Actually, Hank,” Ashley said slowly. “Frankie and I are busy after school today.”
 
“Busy doing what? The three of us always do an after-school activity together.”
 
“Listen, Zip,” Frankie said, putting his hot-sauce-covered hand on my shoulder. “Ashley and I have been asked to be on the second-grade basketball team. The one that’s going to play PS 91 in our yearly game.” 
 
That totally took me by surprise.
 
“Really?” I said. “How come I didn’t hear about this?”
 
Ashley pushed her sparkly purple glasses up on her nose.
 
“Well,” she said, “they only asked the kids who are really good at basketball in gym class. Anyone else who wants to be on the team can come to tryouts. There are still some open spots.”
 
I was quiet as her words bounced around in my brain like a Ping-Pong ball. Frankie knew what I was thinking.
 
“Hey, don’t feel bad, Zip,” he said. “They only asked certain kids because this is a really important game. Our school has beaten PS 91 two years in a row. If we win this year, it will be a three-peat. The first three-peat ever in the whole history of PS 87!”
 
“But I want to play, too,” I said. “It says right on my report card that I play well with others.”
 
“You sure do, Zip. But you have to admit, you’re not that great at basketball.”
 
“What exactly are you saying, Frankie? That I’m short?”
 
“No, that’s not it,” Frankie said. “Look at Ashley. She’s short and she’s on the team.”
 
Ouch, that hurt.
 
“I’m not short,” Ashley said. “I like to think of myself as vertically challenged.”
 
“Me too,” I said. “I’m going to ask the coach if I can try out.”
 
“Why not?” Ashley said. “It never hurts to try. If you don’t, you’ll never know.”
 
“Okay, I’m going to do it. By the way, who is the coach?”
 
“Ms. Adolf,” Ashley said, “the fourth-grade teacher.”
 
I felt my throat tighten up, then the rest of my body followed.
 
“You mean the one who looks like she swallowed a lemon?” I squeaked.
 
“Yup,” Frankie answered. “Old sourpuss herself.”
 
That wasn’t what I wanted to hear. It was hard enough to ask to be on a team that nobody wanted you on. But now I was going to have to ask the meanest teacher on the whole planet Earth. Just looking at Ms. Adolf scared me down to my bones. Her hair was gray. Her clothes were gray. Her face was gray. Even her breath was gray.
 
“Hey, look,” Ashley said, pointing across the room. “Ms. Adolf is on lunch patrol. She’s standing over there by the desserts, making sure no one takes one.”
 
“Go talk to her now, Zip,” Frankie said, giving me a push. “Tell her you want to be on the team.”
 
I got to my feet, walked over to Ms. Adolf, and gave her my best Zipzer smile. She did not smile back.
 
“Don’t even think about taking one of these desserts,” she barked at me. “It will rot your teeth and ruin your brain.”
 
“Actually, Ms. Adolf, I’m here to talk basketball. I’d like to try out for the second-grade team that you’re coaching.”
 
She pulled her gray glasses down on her gray nose and stared at me like I was a flea that just fell off a dog.
 
“Can you shoot?” she asked.
 
“No.”
 
“Can you rebound?”
 
“No.”
 
“Can you jump high?”
 
“No.”
 
“Can you dribble?”
 
“Only from my mouth,” I said. Then I cracked up. But not Ms. Adolf. She just sighed heavily. 
 
“There will be an open tryout this afternoon at three, in the gym,” she said. “I’ve already selected four players for the team. But I can add five more to round out the roster. You can come then, but don’t get your hopes up.”
 
“Great, I’ll be there,” I said. “You’ll see. I’m going to surprise you.”
 
As I walked away, I felt pretty good, and my hopes were up . . . until I suddenly realized that I had nothing to surprise her with. Not one thing.
 
I had to come up with something. And fast.
 
 
Chapter 2 


Four Ways I Could Surprise Ms. Adolf at Basketball Tryouts
 
by Hank Zipzer
 
1. I could arrive in a full bunny suit with ears and a fluffy cottontail. (This has nothing to do with basketball, but boy, would that surprise Ms. Adolf.)
 
2. I could buy two tiny ladders and tie them to the bottom of my feet to make myself taller. (That would surprise everyone, including me, because there’s no such thing as a tiny-ladder store.)
 
3. I could make ten slam dunks in a row. (Not only would that surprise Ms. Adolf, it would surprise the entire solar system, including everybody on Neptune.)
 
4. There is no number four. Sorry, I’m not good at counting.

Author

Henry Winkler is an acomplished actor, producer, and director. He is most well known for playing The Fonz on the American sitcom Happy Days. In 2003, Henry added author to his list of acheivements as he coauthored a series of children's books. Inspired by the true life experiences of Henry Winkler, whose undiagnosed dyslexia made him a classic childhood underachiever, the Hank Zipzer series is based on the high-spirited and funny adventures of a boy with learning differences. Henry is married to Stacey Weitzman and they have three children. View titles by Henry Winkler
Lin Oliver is a children’s book author and writer/producer of numerous television series and movies for children. With Henry Winkler, she writes the New York Times bestselling book series, Hank Zipzer: World’s Best Underachiever, which has sold over 4 million copies and is a hit television series on the BBC. Their new chapter book series, Here’s Hank, is also a New York Times bestseller.  She is also the author of the Who Shrunk Daniel Funk quartet, Sound Bender and The Shadow Mask, adventure/science fiction middle grade novels she coauthored with Theo Baker. Her collection of poetry, the highly praised Little Poems for Tiny Ears, illustrated by Tomie dePaola, is being followed with another poetry collection, Steppin’ Out: Playful Rhymes for Toddler Times. Oliver is the cofounder and Executive Director of SCBWI.  View titles by Lin Oliver