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Smarty Marty Steps Up Her Game

Hardback

Main Details

Title Smarty Marty Steps Up Her Game
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Amy Gutierrez
Illustrated by Ariana Killora
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:132
Dimensions(mm): Height 146,Width 191
ISBN/Barcode 9781944903084
ClassificationsDewey:FIC
Audience
Children / Juvenile

Publishing Details

Publisher Cameron & Company Inc
Imprint Cameron & Company Inc
Publication Date 20 April 2017
Publication Country United States

Description

Smarty Marty, and her little brother Mikey, are back in the first in a series of illustrated chapter books, about a girl who loves baseball, written by San Francisco Giants in-game reporter Amy Gutierrez. Smarty Marty is the official scorekeeper for her little brother's Little League team. But when the game announcer fails to show up for the first

Author Biography

Amy Gutierrez is the San Francisco Giants in-game reporter for Comcast SportsNet Bay Area. She also contributes to G-Mag, Giants Pregame Live, Giants Postgame Live, and SportsNet Central. Raised in Petaluma, California, Gutierrez spent her childhood watching or playing sports. She learned to score baseball from her mom, to play baseball from her dad, and to love baseball from her grandmother. She is the author of Smarty Marty's Got Game, illustrated by Adam McCauley. Ariana Killoran creates illustrations for books, magazines, films and her daughter's lunchbox. With scientists at 23andMe, she has developed educational videos about genetics and human prehistory. Ariana lives on the coast of Maine with her husband and two daughters.

Reviews

"What I appreciate about this book is the strong and supportive relationship Marty has with her friends and her mother (they even have their own signs!) and the way the book tackles emotion. Marty navigates a range of strong emotions and it's great for young readers to witness a positive role model handle everything from fear and anger to doubt, anxiety, and insecurity." --Erika Crowl - Children's writer ". . . the real topic here is what girls (or women) who want to be involved in a field usually reserved for boys (or men) will have to endure . . . the empowerment message comes through loud and clear." - Kirkus Reviews