Shipwreck

Front Cover
Scholastic Inc., 2001 - Juvenile Fiction - 129 pages
Six kids, Nick, J.J., Will, Lyssa, Charla, and Ian, are thrown together against their will on a small boat that will make a one-month journey on the Pacific Ocean. They have all been sent for different reasons. Luke is taking his only choice besides being sent to a juvenile detention facility for a crime he didn't commit. Will and Lyssa are quarreling siblings sent by their parents, who hope the trip will teach them to get along better. J.J. was sent by a movie-star father after he pulled one too many pranks. Ian's parents hoped to cure him of his TV addiction. Charla was sent because she was having an athletic "burnout." But these six totally different kids have to learn to work together to survive a vicious storm and a shipwreck that leave them stranded in the middle of the ocean with no food, no water, and almost no hope for survival.
 

Selected pages

Contents

CHAPTER ONE
3
CHAPTER TWO
8
CHAPTER THREE
16
CHAPTER FOUR
19
CHAPTER FIVE
27
CHAPTER SIX
33
CHAPTER SEVEN
38
CHAPTER EIGHT
45
CHAPTER TWELVE
75
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
81
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
88
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
97
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
106
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
110
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
116
CHAPTER NINETEEN
121

CHAPTER NINE
50
CHAPTER TEN
59
CHAPTER ELEVEN
63
CHAPTER TWENTY
125
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2001)

Gordon Korman was born in Montreal, Canada on October 23, 1963. When his 7th-grade English teacher told the class they could have 45 minutes a day for four months to work on a story of their choice, Korman began This Can't Be Happening at Macdonald Hall. He was also the class monitor for the Scholastic TAB Book Club, so he sent his novel to the address on the TAB flyer, and a few days after his 14th birthday, he had a book contract with Scholastic. By the time he graduated from high school, he had published five other novels and several articles for Canadian newspapers. He received a BFA degree from New York University with a major in Dramatic Writing and a minor in Film and TV. He has written over 75 books for children and young adults including the Swindle series, The Juvie Three, and two books of poetry written by the fictional character Jeremy Bloom.