His personal growth is believable, and readers will be engaged and empathize with his problems. PRAISE FOR Heart of a Champion : "Using straightforward prose, Schwartz develops Kenny into a well-rounded character. Kenny's persistence, hard work and big dreams shape the teen he is to become in this story of happiness found despite all odds. One by one, the boys in the camp pitch in, and the work gives purpose to their long days. Coming across a vacant field covered with scrap wood, broken shakes and torn tar paper, Kenny gets permission to clear it and convert it into a baseball field. When Mickey is arrested for a small act of violence, Kenny manages to keep his family's spirits up, despite the deplorable conditions in camp. When Japan attacks Pearl Harbor in 1941, everything for Kenny and his family spirals out of control: schools are closed, businesses are confiscated, fathers are arrested and sent to work camps in the BC interior and mothers and children are relocated to internment camps. But world events soon overtake life in this quiet community. Despite Kenny's suspected heart condition, he is determined to practice secretly with Mickey so he, too, can one day try out for the Asahi. Ten-year-old Kenny (Kenji in Japanese) worships his older brother, Mickey (Mitsuo), a baseball hero whose outstanding performance on the Asahi baseball team has given him fame and popularity.
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