How to tackle your dreams / Fiona Hardy.

By: Hardy, Fiona [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Boon Wurrung Country, South Melborne, VIC : Affirm Press, 2022Copyright date: ©2022Description: 280 pages ; 20 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781922626684; 1922626686Subject(s): Australian football -- Australia -- Juvenile fiction | Interpersonal relations -- Juvenile fiction | Self-actualization (Psychology) -- Juvenile fiction | Vocational interests -- Juvenile fiction | Families -- Australia -- Juvenile fiction | Friendship -- Juvenile fictionGenre/Form: Sports fiction. DDC classification: A823.4 Summary: Everyone knows that Homer loves Australian Rules football. But ever since his dad moved away and his mum was drafted in the women’s league, something has changed. He’s spending more time fixing clothes with his grandfather than kicking goals with his friends. When Homer’s upgraded school shirt becomes the talk of the playground, he sees a business opportunity that could make him enough money to visit his dad. But the more stitches Homer makes, the more that everything else in his life begins to unravel. His friends don’t understand him, his dad feels further away than ever, and even playing football doesn’t feel like the escape it used to. Can Homer find a way to get back to how things used to be? And what does it mean if he can’t?
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Northam
Northam Junior Fiction
JF HAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31111084056421

Ages 8+.

Everyone knows that Homer loves Australian Rules football. But ever since his dad moved away and his mum was drafted in the women’s league, something has changed. He’s spending more time fixing clothes with his grandfather than kicking goals with his friends. When Homer’s upgraded school shirt becomes the talk of the playground, he sees a business opportunity that could make him enough money to visit his dad. But the more stitches Homer makes, the more that everything else in his life begins to unravel. His friends don’t understand him, his dad feels further away than ever, and even playing football doesn’t feel like the escape it used to. Can Homer find a way to get back to how things used to be? And what does it mean if he can’t?

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