Introducing 

Prezi AI.

Your new presentation assistant.

Refine, enhance, and tailor your content, source relevant images, and edit visuals quicker than ever before.

Loading…
Transcript

Overall, it was a really good book and I would rate it 4 out of 5 stars, and I recomend this book to any baseball or just sports lovers in general.

The narrator played a big role in this story, because if not there would be no Brian and Brian's thoughts would be everywhere.

This book is a first person book because it shows only Brian's thoughts and feelings and nobody else's.

I think that the moral of this story is that a family can't thrive without a father, and you can't make everything work on your own.

The character of Brian was played out well, because it showed from the beginning of the book his love for baseball and that he knows all of the rules and it shows his personality.

This realistic fiction book is interesting because this could actually happen to anyone!

There was some great imagary in this book, because it made you feel on the edge and thinking will Hank ever be nice to Brian?

Brian talks to Hank for the first time in his life, and says, "I just wanted you to know that I am happy you are back." And in return, Brian gets "I get that, what I don't get is: was I talking to anybody?"

"No sir."

"Then don't talk to me."

Every day after his dad left, Brian thinks about him. Brian applied and actually became a bat boy for the Detroit Tigers, and he gets to meet his hero (Or so he thinks) Hank Bishop.

The Bat Boy is about Brian, who lives, breathes, and knows everything there is to know about baseball. His dad was a pitcher in the major leagues, but he moved away to become a coach in Japan and left Brian and his mom alone.

The Bat Boy BY: Mike Lupica

Based on Jim Harvey's speech structures

Learn more about creating dynamic, engaging presentations with Prezi