Home of the Braves

Home of the Braves
Author(s)
Age Range
12+
Release Date
October 30, 2002
ISBN
0374399638
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What makes an average American high school suddenly become violent?

As Joe Brickman heads into the fall of his senior year, he's looking forward to the soccer season, when he will captain the Lawndale team. And surely this will be the year when he and his neighbor Kristine stop teasing each other and begin dating. But scary, unpredictable things start happening at Lawndale High. It's hard to tell what touches off the storm. Is it the arrival of Antonio Silva, a.k.a. the Phenom, a Brazilian soccer star who transforms the Lawndale Braves into a contender, and in doing so clashes with football players? Is it the shake-up of the social order in the school, when the Phenom starts dating Kris, and soccer becomes the "in" sport? Is it the brutal humiliation of Joe's best friend, Ed "the Mouse" McBean, and is Ed planning on taking some dark revenge on the entire school? Perhaps it's all of these new twists, and something older. As violence and danger escalate and school officials clamp down with zero tolerance, Joe finds himself searching for the courage to break free from the forces that threaten to take him down with the home of the Braves.

In his powerful and timely new novel, David Klass dramatizes the many ways in which past violence returns to haunt the present..

What makes an average American high school suddenly become violent?

As Joe Brickman heads into the fall of his senior year, he's looking forward to the soccer season, when he will captain the Lawndale team. And surely this will be the year when he and his neighbor Kristine stop teasing each other and begin dating. But scary, unpredictable things start happening at Lawndale High. It's hard to tell what touches off the storm. Is it the arrival of Antonio Silva, a.k.a. the Phenom, a Brazilian soccer star who transforms the Lawndale Braves into a contender, and in doing so clashes with football players? Is it the shake-up of the social order in the school, when the Phenom starts dating Kris, and soccer becomes the "in" sport? Is it the brutal humiliation of Joe's best friend, Ed "the Mouse" McBean, and is Ed planning on taking some dark revenge on the entire school? Perhaps it's all of these new twists, and something older. As violence and danger escalate and school officials clamp down with zero tolerance, Joe finds himself searching for the courage to break free from the forces that threaten to take him down with the home of the Braves.

In his powerful and timely new novel, David Klass dramatizes the many ways in which past violence returns to haunt the present..

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3 reviews
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Home of the Brave
(Updated: June 12, 2026)
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5.0
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5.0
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Reader reviewed by Kristen

This
book made me cry. It was just so moving in the way it was written in
verse and the nature of the topic of immigration. I really felt like I
slipped into Kek's shoes while reading this wonderful book.




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Couldn't put the book down!
(Updated: June 12, 2026)
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Reader reviewed by Nair

This book I only checked it out from my school library, because I didn't have much time left to check out a book, and I was looking for any sports book(I'm an athlete). Right now I'm really glad that I ended up taking this book, because I don't regret reading it one bit. This is one of the best books I've ever read. I can relate to this book in many ways! Well, I hope you write more sports book, and it was a really fun reading this book.
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A must-read for athletes
(Updated: June 12, 2026)
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Reader reviewed by ljk

Home of the Braves is the story of Joe Brickman, a high school senior who is the captain of a losing soccer team, and what happens to him when his team begins to win after a Brazilian "Phenom" joins his team. This one event seems to change everything: Joe loses the girl he didn't quite have, the football team starts losing, and class issues that simmered beneath the surface for generations threaten to erupt into violence. Joe is ultimately forced to confront both his past and his future, and he finally moves forward with his life,

Home of the Braves is intricately plotted and very realistic, and David Klass makes Joe into a very credible jock. None of the characters in this book are simple, with the possible exception of the Phenom, and even he shows himself to be selfless on the playing field. Klass has combined issues of class, school violence, bullying, and single parent families into the novel without it feeling forced, and I, for one, could not put this book down.

Klass is especially successful at his portrayal of how athletes interact with each other, and the very important role that this plays in a high school's social system. Joe may not be the most popular boy in school, or even the best athlete, but he is a tireless competitor, and because of this even the school's biggest bullies respect him. This also means that while Joe may not be close friends with some of the other boys, he has spent hours working out and practicing with them, and he knows that they can be trusted. Joe's teammates will change with the switch from soccer and football to wrestling, and so his adversaries in the fall will be his teammates in the winter. I've never read a book that has done such a good job portraying the interaction between high school sports and friendship, and for this alone Klass gets my highest rating.

I especially recommend this book for boys, and although the violence is more hinted at then acted upon, the book is challenging enough to be left for middle and high school readers. This is a great book for male athletes, who will identify with the character of Joe, and for girls who want to know what the jock next to her in class is thinking.
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