Green Lake Times
Essay by review • December 20, 2010 • Essay • 601 Words (3 Pages) • 1,109 Views
Green Lake Times
Dear Editor,
This book Holes was a great book. Camp Green Lake is a correctional facility for boys that do bad things. Stanley was guilty of stealing someone's shoes but you will hear more about that later. It was great how the campers stood up for themselves to the Warden. I think that the Warden was very mean. It was scary how she put on that rattlesnake-venom nail polish and slapped Mr. Sir in the face. I think Stanley was very brave. He shouldn't have gone to Camp Green Lake in the first place.
Sweet Feet's Shoes:
The main character's name is Stanley Yelnats. He was guilty of stealing Clyde Livingstone's shoes. Clyde Livingstone is one of the greatest baseball players who ever lived. His nickname is "Sweet Feet" because he holds the record for most stolen bases. He was donating his shoes to a homeless shelter and they would be auctioned off for over $1,000.Stanley is a bit fat and is picked on for his size. Stanley is also very shy. There is something interesting about Stanley; his name is spelt the same way forwards and backwards.
Antagonist Column:
The Warden is the antagonist because she is like the principal of the camp. She is very mean to all the campers including Stanley. She wears nail polish with rattlesnake-venom in it, and when she gets mad she will whack you in the face like she did Mr. Sir.
Killed by the Red Eyed:
My new ending would be when Stanley and Zero find the suitcase that was berried under the ground they would be bitten and killed by those yellow spotted lizards. Then, the Warden would get the suitcase. When Ms. Morengo got there she asked the Warden, "Where is Stanley Yelnats?" The Warden would say, "He ran away." The other counselors would nod their heads in agreement. She didn't know who Hector Zeroni (Zero) was because the Warden erased his files from the computer. When Ms. Morengo left, the Warden opened the suitcase and all that was in their were letters from Stanley's no-good-dirty-rotten-pig-stealing-great-great-grandfather saying that he was good, he wasn't dirty, he wasn't rotten, he wasn't a pig stealer, but he was only his great-great-grandfather.
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