Tiny Timmy: Soccer Superstar by Tim Cahill and Julian Gray
Scholastic, 2015. ISBN 9781760158880
(Age: 7+) Highly recommended. Soccer, Tim Cahill, Bullying,
Achievement. Tim Cahill gives an outline his early life in short
easy to read chapters, using different fonts and illustrations for
the younger reader to develop an idea of the commitment it takes to
be a good sports player. Gently humorous details are given to
introduce the range of skills it takes to be a soccer star.
Tim is known as Tiny Timmy, his stature overlooked by many when he
tries out for the soccer team. Older kids make rude remarks, and
even girls are chosen before him to be part of the team. Used as the
orange boy, he is determined to prove his worth and keeps practising
all the time. He asks all those around him how he can become taller,
with some very funny results. Readers will chuckle at these attempts
to change his size. The coach sees his efforts and suggests that the
only way he can make the team is by continuous practice, and
practice he does in every spare minute through the day. And one day
in trying to escape a vicious dog, he realises just what he can do
with his feet. The following week he becomes the spare, and when
called to the field, he uses his newly learnt skills to save the
day.
This is a lovely story of striving to achieve your goal, and will
appeal to the fans of Tim Cahill and soccer in middle primary
school. The characters are clearly defined, the story simply told
using a variety of techniques to make some words stand out, with
illustrations by Heath McKenzie used to break up the page. The theme
of bullying lies within the story, as part of the background against
which Cahill strives to be better, but the emphasis on doing your
best is more important and will be the idea taken away by the
reader.
This is the first in what should prove to be an excellent and
inviting series of books introducing the game of soccer to a wider
audience by Socceroos legend, Tim Cahill, and Julian Gray.
Fran Knight