Saint Iggy | 
enlarge | Author: K. L. Going Publisher: Harcourt Paperbacks Category: Book
List Price: $6.95 Buy New: $3.10 You Save: $3.85 (55%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 33140
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Reading Level: Young Adult Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 5 x 0.7
ISBN: 0152062483 EAN: 9780152062484 ASIN: 0152062483
Publication Date: May 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: CHARITY SALE!! New book. 100% of the proceeds benefit the literacy and educational efforts of Books for America.
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Product Description
When Iggy Corso gets kicked out of high school, there's no one for him to tell. His mother has gone off, his father is stoned on the couch, and the phone's been disconnected, so even the social worker can't get through. Leaving his public housing behind, Iggy ventures into the world to make something of his life. It's not easy when you're sixteen, have no skills, and your only friend is mixed up with the dealer who got your mom hooked. But Iggy is . . . Iggy, and he has the kind of wisdom that lets him see what no one else can. Includes an author's note.
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A must read for teachers and teens June 19, 2007 I LOVED "Saint Iggy", and I don't say that lightly. Iggy was lost from the start. He was born to a drug addicted mother and an alcoholic father. Although there was no physical abuse he was raised in a roach infested drug house and basically left to raise himself. He didn't have the good fortune to be intelligent or talented and was never taught to think before acting. His impetuous nature gets him into trouble so many times that he gets kicked out of school. With no place else to go, he goes to get help from an adult friend that needs help even more than Iggy. This book should be required reading for every teacher, or other adults who have contact with young people. It does a great job of portraying how a young man from unfortunate circumstances views the world and himself and will help you view some of these kids with different eyes.
An enjoyable and entertaining read January 5, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Randy "Igmund" Corso is a third-year freshman with a colorful track record at school. When you have a record like he does, teachers can lie about you, and no one believes you, especially not the court system that's supposed to decide if you're expelled from school or not. With the way everyone treats him, you'd think he's a bad kid, but he's not. He attends class, sometimes. He doesn't use drugs, even though he was born addicted. He does his best to stay away from his father's drug dealer Freddie, who is always knocking on their door looking for money.
With his dad most likely passed out drunk or high at home and his mom "visiting someone" somewhere, Iggy doesn't have anyone to tell when he gets indefinitely suspended from high school for an offense he didn't commit. Even the social worker can't get through because the phone has been disconnected.
With a few days until the hearing, Iggy turns to his friend Montell, a law school dropout from the rich side of town who is investing his time in pot and philosophy. Iggy needs a plan to straighten out his life, but that's more difficult done than said for a 16-year-old with no skills or money who has just been kicked out of school. His makeshift plan is to:
1) make a plan 2) get out of the projects 3) do something with my life 4) change everyone's mind about me 5) get back into school
During the week before Christmas, Iggy drags himself around the city looking for answers and enlightenment. He keeps thinking about his principal, who told him to "do something that contributes to the world." That seems like such an easy thing to do until he tries it.
How exactly can one kid do something to contribute? What if he's never had any examples to follow? What if the only differences he can make are too small for anyone to notice? And does it even matter if people notice?
Author of the Printz Honor Book FAT KID RULES THE WORLD, K. L. Going has put together another enjoyable read. The contrast of Iggy's dark urban world against Mo's posh lifestyle provides the story with an ideal backdrop for a grim hero like this to emerge. An entertaining novel with more depth than you'd imagine at first glance, SAINT IGGY takes the life of a fringe-living outcast from the projects and makes him someone unforgettable.
--- Reviewed by Jonathan Stephens
Fringe-Living Outcast from the Projects November 17, 2006 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Randy "Igmund" Corso is a third-year freshman with a colorful track record at school. When you have a record like he does, teachers can lie about you, and no one believes you, especially not the court system that's supposed to decide if you're expelled from school or not. With the way everyone treats him, you'd think he's a bad kid, but he's not. He attends class, sometimes. He doesn't use drugs, even though he was born addicted. He does his best to stay away from his father's drug dealer Freddie, who is always knocking on their door looking for money.
With his dad most likely passed out drunk or high at home and his mom "visiting someone" somewhere, Iggy doesn't have anyone to tell when he gets indefinitely suspended from high school for an offense he didn't commit. Even the social worker can't get through because the phone has been disconnected.
With a few days until the hearing, Iggy turns to his friend Montell, a law school dropout from the rich side of town who is investing his time in pot and philosophy. Iggy needs a plan to straighten out his life, but that's more difficult done than said for a 16-year-old with no skills or money who has just been kicked out of school. His makeshift plan is to:
1) make a plan 2) get out of the projects 3) do something with my life 4) change everyone's mind about me 5) get back into school
During the week before Christmas, Iggy drags himself around the city looking for answers and enlightenment. He keeps thinking about his principal, who told him to "do something that contributes to the world." That seems like such an easy thing to do until he tries it.
How exactly can one kid do something to contribute? What if he's never had any examples to follow? What if the only differences he can make are too small for anyone to notice? And does it even matter if people notice?
Author of the Printz Honor Book FAT KID RULES THE WORLD, K. L. Going has put together another enjoyable read. The contrast of Iggy's dark urban world against Mo's posh lifestyle provides the story with an ideal backdrop for a grim hero like this to emerge. An entertaining novel with more depth than you'd imagine at first glance, SAINT IGGY takes the life of a fringe-living outcast from the projects and makes him someone unforgettable.
Reviewed by Jonathan Stephens
Copyright 1997-2006, [...] All rights reserved
Powerful read September 24, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
There's something about Christmas in the city. The lights, the shopping, the darkness. December is the darkest month of the year. KL uses wonderful imagery to describe the life of Iggy, who you care and root for, but it is December, and Iggy is surrounded by darkness.
Yet, around every corner, a light.
It's refreshing to read a book where drugs play a role, but don't get a hundred pages in the protaganist's head or with his/her friends trying to decide what to do. For Iggy, there is no decision. The answer is simply no.
Having been born addicted to crack, he spent his whole life watching drugs destroy his parents. Now, as a teenager, he sees his worthless dad, strung out on the couch each day, and his mother - missing because she is possibly with the local dealer, Freddie.
Iggy wants to do something "good". After a misunderstanding at school in which Iggy's so called reputation causes a teacher to vastly misinterpret his intentions, Iggy is kicked out of school. But first he is given a lecture by the principal which sticks in his thoughts. Haunts him. Wakes him up to the world in which he is perceived, and makes him ache for an answer.
He doesn't have access to things others take for granted, namely money. World peace would not cross Iggy's mind. In his world, he imagines himself saving a kid from a drug dealer. Or, perhaps he could simply find his mother, and with her, the world itself would be good once again.
So, Iggy forms a plan...
Iggy Corso is one of the most detailed characters I've ever read. I would swear if I were to visit the city I would find him walking down the street, or sitting at the barber's getting his hair cut.
This book isn't the typical teeny bop pink fantasy. It's a rare literary masterpiece for the teen market. I hope it gets the attention and the audience it deserves.
Richie's Picks: SAINT IGGY August 31, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
SAINT IGGY is the bittersweet story of New York teenager Iggy Corso, a challenged young man who lives in public housing with a father who is typically to be found crashed out on the rotting couch, stoned and/or drunk. Their smelly and decrepit apartment is packed with broken furniture that his father has picked up off the street on garbage days. Meanwhile, Iggy's addict mother went out "visiting" a month ago and hasn't been seen since. Freddie, who is Iggy's dad's dealer, grew up with Iggy's dad in that same public housing building.
"I think about the facts, and I've failed two grades, been suspended eight times, got caught stealing someone's sneakers, had to go to the Principal's office almost every other day starting in kindergarten when I bit a kid for touching me, and I've been in every kind of program ever invented, like Big Siblings, Tutoring, Homework Help, Map for the Future, and Head Start, and none of it has made any difference, partly because I am lazy and partly because I get distracted in the middle of things instead of finishing."
Iggy is now a sixteen year old high school freshman, and a few days before Christmas vacation he's about to permanently get the boot. A teacher felt threatened when Iggy followed a hot new female student into the teacher's classroom and Iggy insisted he also belonged in the class. After the security guy came and mashed Iggy's face into the concrete, the principal suspended Iggy and scheduled an expulsion hearing. But before Iggy left that day, the principal told him:
" 'You've had a lot to overcome in your life, but that's no excuse for poor discipline. We can all make something of ourselves, no matter what our situation. We can do something that contributes to the world, live a life that has meaning."
Iggy understands that he needs to complete school or he is really going to be without choices. Grasping the principal's words like an inflatable cushion in the aftermath of a plane crash, this teen with so little in skills to work with and so little support becomes determined to try and make a contribution in the next few days, before the hearing, so that he won't be expelled.
This is the extraordinary story of Iggy's quest.
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