Holes (novel)

Holes
Author Louis Sachar
Language English
Genre Adventure, Satire
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux (US)
Bloomsbury (UK)
Ediciones SM (Spain)
Publication date
August 20, 1998
ISBN 978-0-786-22186-8
OCLC 3800257333232
[Fic] 21
LC Class PZ7.S1185 Ho 1998

Holes is a 1998 young adult mystery comedy novel written by Louis Sachar and first published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. It won the 1998 U.S. National Book Award for Young People's Literature[1] and the 1999 Newbery Medal for the year's "most distinguished contribution to American literature for children".[2] In 2012 it was ranked number 6 among all-time children's novels in a survey published by School Library Journal.[3]

Holes was adapted as a feature film of the same name by Walt Disney Pictures, and was released in 2003.

Plot

Present day

Stanley Yelnats IV is a 14-year-old boy from a hard-working but poor family that is (allegedly) affected by "a curse" of bad luck, which they blame on at Stanley's "no-good-dirty-rotten pig-stealing-great-great-grandfather".[4] Stanley's latest adversity is to be wrongly accused of stealing a pair of shoes contributed to a children's orphanage by the baseball player Clyde "Sweet Feet" Livingston.

As retribution, Stanley is sent to Camp Green Lake, a juvenile imprisonment and disciplinary facility which, unlike its name suggests, is in the middle of a sterile desert. As a punishment, they have to dig 1 hole a day 5 feet wide and 5 feet deep to 'build character'. But then Stanley discovers that they are not digging holes to build character they are digging to find something hidden beneath the dry, rocky ground.

19th-century Latvia

Stanley's great-great-grandfather, Elya Yelnats, is in love with a girl named Myra Menke, but a much older man named Igor Barkov is also trying to marry her as his wife. Igor is a pig farmer, and he offers his heaviest pig in exchange for Myra's hand-in marriage.

Desperate to impress Myra and her father, Elya goes to his friend Madame Zeroni, for help. She warns him that Myra is not intelligent and will not be a good wife, and advises him to move to America, as her son has. She gives him a tiny piglet, telling him to carry the piglet up a mountain every day, and let it drink from a stream while singing to it. Each day the water will make it grow bigger, and Elya will grow stronger. On the last day, after he carries the pig one last time, he must carry Madame Zeroni herself up the mountain to do the same, as he will then be strong enough to carry her.

Elya follows her directions, and the piglet grows to a large size, but he does not carry the pig up on the final day. Elya nearly wins Myra as his bride, but his pig is revealed to be the same weight as Igor's. Since the pigs weigh the same, Myra is given the choice between Elya and Igor, but fails to decide, resorting to letting Elya and Igor each pick a number: the one who has the number closest to the one in her mind wins her hand. Elya realizes Madame Zeroni was right about Myra's stupidity and walks away in disgust. Forgetting to carry Madame Zeroni up the mountain, he moves to America to start a new life, falls in love, and marries, but he is beset by Madame Zeroni's curse. Stanley's friend Zero is revealed to be Hector Zeroni, Madame Zeroni's great-great-great grandson.

Green Lake

The town of Green Lake was a flourishing lakeside community in the old west (1888). Katherine "Kate" Barlow, the local teacher, has a romantic interest in Sam, an African-American onion seller, while rejecting advances from Charles "Trout" Walker(named due to the smell of his feet). There is an uproar in the town after a townswoman sees Kate and Sam kissing in an alley. After no children arrive at the schoolhouse the next day, a mob led by a wealthy resident Trout Walker enters and begins trashing the schoolhouse, and Kate realizes Sam is in danger of being lynched. Kate then seeks the help of the sheriff, who says that Sam is to be hung, as per the law, and (drunkenly) says that he can spare Sam if she gives him a kiss. Kate leaves in disgust. She finds Sam and they try to escape onto the lake in his rowboat, but Walker and a group of vigilantes catch up to them and ram the rowboat, destroying it, with Trout's new motorboat. Sam is shot and killed in the water, while Kate is rescued against her wishes. Sam's murder curses Green Lake: no rain falls on the area, and eventually the lake dries up and the town becomes abandoned.

For the next 20 years, Kate has become "Kissin' Kate" Barlow, a feared Texan outlaw who leaves a prominent kiss-mark in lipstick on her first dead victim. Kate robs Stanley's great-grandfather, Stanley Yelnats I, of his entire fortune, but rather than kill him, she abandons him in the desert that was Green Lake. Miraculously, he survives.

Years later (1908), Kate returns to an old cabin on the former lakeside and is tracked down by Charles Walker and his wife, who are bankrupt and desperate for money. They try to force her to reveal where she buried her loot, but she is bitten by a yellow-spotted lizard and dies. As she dies, she taunts them by saying, "start digging". The Walkers are left to dig the entire area in order to find the buried suitcase. The Warden is the granddaughter of the Walkers, and is using the campers to search for the treasure.

Camp Green Lake

The inmates at Camp Green Lake are forced to dig cylindrical holes five feet deep and five feet wide, which the warden says "builds their character." They are promised the rest of their day off if they find anything that the Warden considers "interesting". Stanley finds a fossil, but Mr Pendanski tells him that the Warden "isn't interested in fossils", leading Stanley to suspect they are looking for something in particular. During one dig, Stanley finds one of Barlow's lipstick tubes(though he doesn't recognize it for what it is), but he pawns it off to X-Ray, the ringleader of Tent D, who convinces him that he deserves it more than Stanley. The Warden is excited by the discovery and orders them to greatly enlarge X-Ray's hole (the wrong hole) and to sift through the dirt from it for several weeks.

Meanwhile, Stanley and Zero, the smallest of Tent D, who got his nickname because "he has nothing in his head", become friends. Stanley agrees to teach Zero how to read, and in return, Zero digs Stanley's hole part of the time. The other boys eventually become jealous after seeing Stanley getting help, eventually resulting in a fight. The Warden and the staff arrive and, learning that Zero has been assisting Stanley with digging in return for receiving education, mock him. The argument culminates in Zero hitting Mr. Pendanski with a shovel and running away, and the camp staff decide to erase their records of him and let him die in the desert. A few days later, Stanley follows Zero and finds him living under the remains of Sam's boat, eating very old jars of Kate's spiced peaches, which he calls "Sploosh". Stanley notices a mountain resembling a human fist giving the thumbs up sign, and recalls that Stanley Yelnats I claimed to find "refuge on God’s thumb". On the mountain, Zero admits that he was the one who stole Clyde "Sweet Feet" Livingston's shoes.

Atop the mountain, Stanley discovers a field of onions that was once Sam's. The boys eat the onions and find water by digging in the ground, and Stanley sings Madame Zeroni's song to Zero, unknowingly breaking the curse. Stanley suggests that they return to the hole where Stanley found the lipstick to find the buried treasure. They find a suitcase buried in the hole, but they are captured by the Warden, and surrounded by a group of lethal yellow-spotted lizards. A stalemate develops: they cannot move, but the lizards prevent the Warden's staff from approaching them. The lizards do not bite Stanley and Zero because they are repelled by onions (as Sam once said). They remain in the hole until the next morning, when an attorney arrives demanding Stanley's release, having received testimony that gives him an alibi during the time the shoes were stolen. The Warden tries to claim they stole the suitcase from her, but Zero reveals that the name 'Stanley Yelnats' is written on it, as the suitcase had belonged to Stanley's great-grandfather (Stanley Yelnats I), the one that had been robbed. But, Stanley didn't want to leave Zero at the camp, since he would most likely be killed. The attorney orders the Warden to get Zero's file, but the camp staff are unable to find his file. So, he too is released.

Stanley's family open the case, discovering the jewels, deeds, stocks and promissory notes stolen from Stanley Yelnats I. Using the money raised from the bonds, Stanley's family buys a new house and Zero hires a team of investigators to find his missing mother; meanwhile, the drought at Green Lake is brought to an end by rainfall. The family's luck seems to change as if in response to Stanley's fulfillment of his ancestor's promise (a suggestion left purposely ambiguous by the narration). In a final scene, Clyde Livingston and his wife, along with the Yelnats and Zeroni families, celebrate the success of Stanley's father's antidote to foot odor, composed of preserved and fermented spiced peaches and onions and named "Sploosh" by Zero. The Warden is forced to sell Green Lake to "a national organization dedicated to the well-being of young girls", which turns it into a Girl Scout camp.

Characters

Major characters

Pre–Camp Green Lake characters

Characters in mid-1800s Latvia

Minor Characters

Setting

Camp Green Lake is located in Texas[7] on a dried up lake. The area is not green and there is no lake, besides the fact that that there is such a little amount of shade (two oak trees) which is owned by the Warden. Camp Green Lake is a parched barren place with the scorching sun above them with hardly any clouds, so the sun is always shining, making the environment much hotter. Camp Green Lake is a juvenile detention center, where inmates spend most of their time digging holes. The majority of the book takes place between the past and present. Protagonists deal with flashbacks existing from pre-dried up Green Lake to Latvia (mid-1800s) back to modern day Camp Green Lake.

Film adaptation

Main article: Holes (film)

In 2003, Walt Disney Pictures released a film version of Holes, which was directed by Andrew Davis and written by Louis Sachar.[8]

Sequels

Two companion novels have followed Holes: Stanley Yelnats' Survival Guide to Camp Green Lake (2003) and Small Steps (2006).[9]

Stanley Yelnats's Survival Guide to Camp Green Lake

As Louis Sachar states: "Should you ever find yourself at Camp Green Lake—or somewhere similar—this is the guide for you." Written from Stanley's point of view, the book offers advice on everything from scorpions, rattlesnakes, yellow-spotted lizards, etc.[10]

Small Steps

In this sequel to Holes, former inmate Armpit is now 17 and struggling with the challenges facing an African American teenager with a criminal history. A new friendship with Ginny, who has cerebral palsy, a reunion with former friend X-Ray, a ticket-scalping scheme, a beautiful pop singer, and a frame-up all test Armpit’s resolve to "Just take small steps and keep moving forward".[11]

References

  1. "National Book Awards – 1998". National Book Foundation. Retrieved 2012-01-26.
    (With acceptance speech by Sachar.)
  2. "Newbery Medal and Honor Books, 1922-Present". Association for Library Service to Children. ALA. Retrieved 2012-03-26.
  3. Bird, Elizabeth (July 7, 2012). "Top 100 Chapter Book Poll Results". A Fuse #8 Production. Blog. School Library Journal (blog.schoollibraryjournal.com). Retrieved 2015-10-29.
  4. Sachar, Louis (2000). Holes. New York: Yearling Books. p. 7. ISBN 0440414806.
  5. "author's website". www.Louissachar.com. 2002. Retrieved February 2015.
  6. Sachar, Louis (1998). "Holes", p. 103. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York 30 November 2015.
  7. Sachar, Louis (2000). Holes. New York: Yearling. p. 1. ISBN 0440414806.
  8. Holes at the Internet Movie Database
  9. Small Steps: Summary and book reviews of Small Steps by Louis Sachar
  10. Sachar, Louis. "Stanley Yelnats's Survival Guide to Camp Green Lake". Louis Sachar. Retrieved 2015.
  11. Sachar, Louis. "Louis Sachar: Booklist". Louis Sachar. Louis Sachar. Retrieved 2015.

External links

Awards
Preceded by
Out of the Dust
Newbery Medal recipient
1999
Succeeded by
Bud, Not Buddy
Preceded by
New category
Winner of the
William Allen White Children's Book Award
Grades 6–8

2001
Succeeded by
Bud, Not Buddy
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