Sonntag, 16. November 2008
Fifth entry: after finishing the novel:
I think most of my first impressions were right. I have Sam almost right appreciated. He’s a really good dad and takes much care of Roof and looks after him very friendly. Up to the middle of the novel I thought: Oh my god, Sam is a really complete moron. Why he runs away from home? He has such a nice mother and can talk with her about all his problems and he runs away. But it was wrong to think that he doesn’t use his chance to have such a young mother. He talked a lot with her after half the novel and got on like a house of fire. He has shared all his problem with his mother and I think it was good to have such a mother and you can talk about your sorrows.
What I learned that I never knew before:
I learned that not all people live so airily like we do. I know now that many teenagers have really big problems and life can be really hard and unfair. I didn’t know before that England has so many teenagers’ pregnancies. And I also didn’t know how hard it is to have a baby with 16. I think it’s a really hard job to manage your life with a baby and Sam and Alicia had the aid from their parents and not all young parents have this luck. I know now that not all kids life in such a controlled family background like I do.
Also I learned much about skater. I knew nothing about skaters before I read this book because I’m not interested in skating. And now I heard many about skaters like skating tricks like “Sacktap” or “shove-it”. But I have to say that I haven’t really understood how this tricks work.
Who I would like to comment the book to:
I would like to read some more comments of the book from other people in our age. Perhaps from people out of other countries because I think it would be very interesting to read how they think about the book and Sam’s life. I think not all over the world people think about it like we do.
Who should not read the book? Why not?
I think this book is not so adapted to read for people out of other cultures. I think people out of really poor countries wouldn’t understand the problem the book is about. Also I think people from countries e.g. out of Africa wouldn’t understand the book because there it is normal to have babies and to marry really young. And there they are all so poor that it isn’t such a problem to life with a baby when you haven’t got parents which pay for you.
Also I think it’s not a perfect book for strict Catholics or even priests. They think unlike we do about topics like having sex or abortions. So I think their meanings about the book wouldn’t be very good and they wouldn’t understand how you can live such a life like Sam.
Sonntag, 9. November 2008
Music/Pictures that might go well with the atmosphere
There I was, twenty one
Fourth entry: after having read more than half the novel
- Have you friends which have born a child as they were so young as Sam and Alicia? Or why have you written a book about a young boy and his pregnant young (ex-) girlfriend?
- Are you skater? Or wherefrom you know such a lot of skater information?
- How long have you needed to write this book?
- What have you inspired to write this book? Was that providence?
A rough summary of the book so far:
The book “Slam” written by Nick Hornby is about a sixteen years old skater boy who’s called Sam. He’s an only child and goes to college. On a party where his mother was he met a pretty young girl, Alicia. He felt in love with her. But then a bad accident happened. Alicia got pregnant. Before they knew that they broke up. As she told him that she’s perhaps pregnant he dreamed in night about the future. In this dream he lived with Alicia and a little boy in Alicia’s house with their parents. Because this was such a big shock for Sam he run away from home to Hastings and tried to find work to earn money. But he only met a strange old man. So he returned at home. He met Alicia and they told their parents that she’s pregnant. Her parents were shocked, too. So they all went to Sam’s mom and told her about the pregnancy. Alicia decided to become mother. Sam and Alicia became a couple again. As almost the same time Sam’s mother told him that she’s pregnant, too. Alicia and Sam decided to live together with Alicia’s family when the baby is born. One night he had another dream about the future. He had a little sister called Emily. He lived in his own room again. Because Alicia was ill he had to look after his little two years old son, Roof.
Ideas which made me stop and think:
I think it’s strange to talk to a poster. It’s normal to have an idol and to know a book by heart. But it’s really curious to think a poster talks to you and sentences out of the book are advices the writer says to you.
It’s also strange to live with your girlfriend with their parents together with sixteen. I think that can’t go well.
Anything in Slam that I truly enjoy and that I even feel annoyed of:
I really enjoy that funny spelling style. Many situations are serious and not funny p.e. as they told Sam’s mother from the pregnancy but it’s so funny written that you have to laugh about it. That makes it so comfortably to read this book and so the book isn’t boring. But I really feel annoyed from Sam’s conversations with Tom Hawks’ poster. I think that’s so stupid to talk to a poster and think it says something to you and he does this so often that I feel annoyed of.
Mittwoch, 5. November 2008
Third entry: up to the middle of the novel
Of course my feelings changed. First I thought that Sam is a normal, happy young boy. He’s like we are. He goes to school and skates a lot. Although he is an only child and he lives only with his mother, without his dad, he lives in a controlled family background. He only has normal problems for his age. But now I think he is a really poor young boy and he has too big problems for his age. To become father with 16 is not normal. I can understand that he is very confused and he has anxiety. It’s a really hard situation for him and for his mother and for Alicia and their family, too. And I can understand that he has many sorrows. I don’t want to change my life with his life. I really commiserate him.
Which question(s) I would like to direct at a particular character in the novel:
- Sam, do you think it is right to run away from home? Don’t you think your mum will die because she has so many sorrows because of you/ you run away from home and her? And do you think it is fair to let Alicia by oneself with all the problems?
- Mr. Brady, who are you? Why are you so curious and so unfriendly to Sam? You don’t know Sam. And why do you live in this B&B? Haven’t you got a home and a wife?
What I am confused about (events or characters):
I’m a little bit confused about Hastings. Sam described it as a funfair with many jobs… and now he is there and there is nobody and no work. It seems to be an abandoned place with only very strange people. And he isn’t really happy there. Mr. Brady is also a strange person. His character is a little bit confusing. And why wrote Nick Hornby this chapters? I think these pages are really dispensable. It’s boring to read this chapter. It’s too long. He could write this much shorter. And why wrote Nick Hornby about Mr. Brady? He hasn’t anything to do with Sam or his situation.
Also I’m confused about the dream. Is that a little outlook how the book will end? Why he dreamed that? Are these Sam’s biggest sorrows?
How I as the author would have changed the book:
I think the book is really good. But I would have written that he tells his mother very quickly about the accident. That would be easier for him and for the reader, too. A problem shared is a problem halved. And I wouldn‘t have written that he run to Hastings. I think this scene isn’t consistent to this book. I think it is ok that he run away from home, but I would have written another reaction, run away from home is no good solution.
Images/pictures I like:
- “I dreamed my way through school for the next few weeks. I dreamed my way through life, really. It was all just waiting.”
- “It always felt like a holiday, the time with Alicia, and the holiday would come to an end, and we’d still be girlfriend and boyfriend but we’d have a life as well.”
- “David Backhem and Posh Spice have sex in Brooklyn. And nine months later they have a baby. What’s the word? Brooklyn was somethinged in Brooklyn.”
Dienstag, 4. November 2008
Second entry: after the opening chapters of the book
Phrases that caught my eye while reading:
- “Sometimes it can seem as though kids always do better than their parents.” (p.14, l. 9,10)
- “The whole point of friends is that you choose them yourself.” (p.21, l.28,29)
- “And I play the piano, so I listen to classical sometimes. There. That didn’t kill me, did it?” (p.30, l.11, 12)
- “I could think of a single thing she could say that would make me think she was a big-head, if it didn’t involve passing exams, or maybe sport” (p.43, l.19-22)
- “Because if someone tells you she loves you, then you’re bound to say it back, aren’t you? You have to be pretty hard not to.” (p.53, l.21-23)
Sonntag, 2. November 2008
First entry

- many skater information
- a love story between Alicia and Sam
- in the background Sam's mother's difficult life
- problems in a teeny life, important time in Sam’s life difficult
- way from a child to a man
- many inner thoughts, perhaps about his future
- problems between Sam and his mother
- a interesting teeny story with many references to our life
- a story that could be real
I think I will have much fun while I will read this book. It must be a book perfectly for our age and in England it seems to be very successful. The comments from newspapers, magazines…. sound very ardently and the blurb sounds really interesting.
At home I’ve only read a few books in English. But they were all great and interesting and really easy to read. E.g. I’ve read “The bottle imp” by R.L. Stevenson or two Harry Potter books “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” and “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” by J.K. Rowling. After I’ve read Harry Potter in English, I think, the German books aren’t really good. In English you can better understand what the author would like to say to you and the ambition to read the book is much stronger than if you read it in German.
Other texts we’ve studying in the classroom were only “The in-crowd” by Patricia Reilly and “Of Mice and Men” by John Steinbeck. I think it could be useful to study texts in the classroom. You will experience a lot if your classmates say their thoughts to the book and to special chapters. But after a little while it is really boring to speak about a book and you prefer to do something else.

