Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The main characters of the series. From left to right: Vince, Spinelli, Mikey, T.J., Gretchen and Gus. Theodore Jasper "T.J." Detweiler Jr. (voiced by Ross Malinger, Seasons 1–2; Andrew Lawrence, Seasons 2–6): T.J. is the main protagonist of the series, the leader of his five best friends, and usually spends time planning pranks against the teachers.
A tomboyish girl who is a fan of Charles F. Muntz. She desires to move her "clubhouse" to a cliff overlooking Paradise Falls. [32] Enola Holmes: Enola Holmes Enola Holmes 2: 2020–present Millie Bobby Brown: Enola is a bit of a tomboyish girl in the 19th century. She is engaging in activities such as jiujitsu, reading, science, and playing chess.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Recess: School's Out (also known as Recess: The Movie – School's Out) is a 2001 American animated adventure comedy film based on the Disney television series Recess, [3] and features the voices of Andrew Lawrence, Rickey D'Shon Collins, Jason Davis, Ashley Johnson, Courtland Mead, Pamela Adlon, Dabney Coleman, Melissa Joan Hart, April Winchell, and James Woods.
Jerry Spinelli (born February 1, 1941) [1] is an American writer of children's novels that feature adolescence and early adulthood. His novels include Maniac Magee , [ 2 ] Stargirl , and Wringer . Biography
Seeing how deranged he has become, the rest of his friends (including the sporty Vince LaSalle, the intellectual Gretchen Grundler, the rough-and-tumble Ashley Spinelli—referred to by her last name—and the sweet, naïve Mikey Blumberg) must try to break him out of detention by enlisting the help of the other students on the playground.
Life is hard for him without any stable friends, but one day when he discovers the library card and takes out a book, he finds refuge from loneliness. The final character, April Mendez, has just moved for her father's job on a mushroom farm. She boards a "moving library," (book mobile) which becomes subject to an attempted hijacking.
Wringer was praised by critics for its ability to address deep issues for middle schoolers, as did its precursor, Maniac Magee.In a School Library Journal review of Wringer, Tim Rausch cited the novel for "Humor, suspense, a bird with a personality, and a moral dilemma familiar to everyone," characters who are "memorable, convincing, and both endearing and villainous," and a "riveting plot."