Junior Ninja Champion: The Competition Begins

Junior Ninja Champion: The Competition Begins

by Catherine Hapka
Junior Ninja Champion: The Competition Begins

Junior Ninja Champion: The Competition Begins

by Catherine Hapka

Hardcover

$13.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

For ninja fans everywhere, this action-packed adventure series brings five unlikely friends together to compete in the first-ever Junior Ninja competition. 

Izzy, Ty, Kevin, JJ, and Mackenzie don't have a lot in common. But they have all seen the reality TV obstacle competition National Ninja Champion.

When news breaks that there's going to be a kids' version of the show—and tryouts are just a few miles away—all five find themselves drawn to the obstacle course at Fit Kidz Gym. Before they know it, they've become a team—training together and helping one another overcome all kinds of obstacles as they compete for the title of Junior Ninja Champion. With lots of heart and edge-of-your-seat excitement, Junior Ninja Champion packs in the action of the competition along with all the ups and downs on the journey to making it.

Who will secure a spot in the finals, and who will be named Junior Ninja Champion?

Look for the sequel coming in January 2019!

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781328710581
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 06/05/2018
Series: Junior Ninja Champion
Pages: 160
Sales rank: 538,536
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 10 - 12 Years

About the Author

Catherine Hapka has published more than two hundred books for kids in all age groups from board books to young adult novels. When she’s not writing, Cathy enjoys horseback riding, animals of all kinds, reading, gardening, music, and travel. She lives in an old house on a small farm in Chester County, PA, where she keeps three horses, a small flock of chickens, and too many cats.
 

Read an Excerpt

One

Izzy Fitzgerald tiptoed past the den. Her father and older brother were watching TV in there. She paused when she realized what they were watching. It was National Ninja Champion.
     Oh right, it’s the finals tonight, she thought.
     She bit her lip, remembering the days when the whole family would watch that show together every week. Her mother had loved it . . .
     But never mind. Izzy could catch the finals online later. Right now she needed to keep moving. She didn’t want her dad to catch her sneaking out. Especially since she’d just finished being grounded from last time.
     At least watching NNC will keep Dad and Charlie too busy to wonder where I am, she thought as she crept toward the back door. Not that they spend much time thinking about me anyway.
     She opened the door, lifting the handle slightly to avoid the squeak in the hinges. She closed it behind her just as carefully. As she bent down to grab her skateboard, which she’d stashed in the bushes right outside, Izzy heard voices at the back gate.
     Yikes! She darted behind the dumb statue of some Greek goddess that her dad thought was so classy. Seconds later her stepmonster, Tina, came into view, dressed in her fancy new running shoes and designer sweats. Izzy’s sixteen-year-old sister, Hannah, was with her. Hannah was laughing at something Tina had just said, even though nothing she said was ever actually funny.
     Izzy touched her hair. She’d unbraided it just before sneaking out, so the purple streak her friend Jess had helped her dye into it was visible. Which meant she’d better not let Tina or her dad see it. They still didn’t know about the purple streak. They said twelve was too young for a girl to start dyeing her hair.
     Which is totally unfair, Izzy thought. Especially since Tina spends half her time at the salon getting hers dyed that hideous shade of red.
     “Good run, sweetie,” Tina was saying to Hannah, giving her a squeeze on the shoulder. “You’ll be ready for that ten K for sure.”
     “Thanks for training with me, Tina.” Hannah sounded happy and only a little out of breath.
     “Anytime, sweetie. It’s what we do, right?” Tina let out one of her tinkly little laughs. “Fitzgeralds are runners—​that’s what your dad always says.”
     Dad really did say that a lot, especially whenever he was trying to talk Izzy into joining the track team at school—​just like Hannah and Charlie. Fitzgeralds are runners, Isabella, he’d say. You can’t fight it.
     Izzy wrinkled her nose, hating to hear him use her full name even in her head. She also hated to hear Tina use Dad’s favorite phrase, since she wasn’t even a real Fitzgerald—​she’d only married Dad a year and a half ago. But she was a real runner. She and Dad had met at a half marathon.
     Tina and Hannah seemed to stay out in the back courtyard forever, stretching and blabbing. But finally they went inside, and Izzy was free.
     She dashed out the back gate and across the neighbors’ pool deck, then vaulted over the fence to the street. Finally she dropped her board, kicking off and gliding down the hill toward the center of town.
     Jess was waiting in the parking lot of the Hillside Shopping Center, lounging on a bench with her board at her feet and earbuds in. “You’re late,” she said, peeling out one bud.
     “Sorry. Almost got caught.” Izzy started to explain, but Jess waved it away.
     “Whatever. Want to see a new move Tommy taught me?”
     “Sure!” Izzy tried not to sound too eager. Jess was two years older, and Tommy was her boyfriend. Both of them went to Fairview High and were way cooler than anyone in the seventh grade at Izzy’s snooty private school. Izzy felt lucky that Jess wanted to hang out with her.
     Hillside was almost deserted, as usual, even though most of the stores were open until nine. Almost everyone had switched over to the fancy new mall out on the highway. But that was okay with Izzy. It meant she and Jess hardly ever got hassled about skateboarding or doing parkour here. Plus the weird two-level layout and the bumpy, weedy pavement made it more fun.
     And parkour was the most fun Izzy had had since . . . Well, in a long time. It was all about fun—​running, jumping, leaping over stuff, climbing walls, anything like that. She loved challenging herself that way, even when it was kind of scary. Maybe especially when it was scary.
     Jess showed her the new trick, vaulting over the low wall at the edge of a walkway, using only one hand. They practiced that for a while and then did some of the usual stuff—​leaping over parking barriers and decorative fences, various skateboard tricks, and more.
     “This is boring,” Jess said after Izzy landed a jump on her board. “I have an idea—​let’s do that.”
     She pointed to the sunken restaurant at the center of the shopping plaza. Izzy was confused.
     “Do what? Go eat?” she asked.
     Jess laughed and tossed her shaggy half-blond, half-green bangs out of her face. “No—​the steps,” she said. “Let’s try skating down them.” She grinned. “No jumping—​you have to skate all the way down.”
     Izzy walked to the top of the steps. They were high and pretty steep, with a landing in the middle. “I dunno,” she said. “Might be hard to make that turn. Plus you’d have to stop fast or hit the window at the bottom.”
     “Yeah. Cool, right?” Jess pulled a coin out of her pocket. “We’ll flip to see who gets to go first.”
     Izzy hesitated, but Jess was already tossing the coin in the air. “Tails!” Izzy blurted out.
     Jess slapped the coin onto the back of her hand. “Tails it is,” she said. “You’re up!”
     Izzy swallowed hard and glanced at the steps. They suddenly looked even higher and steeper than before. But she never backed down from a challenge. Never.
     Besides, she’d skated down steps before. Maybe not ones this steep or this high . . . But she couldn’t chicken out in front of Jess. No way.
     “What are you waiting for, Fitzgerald?” Jess said.
     “Nothing.” Izzy kicked off, holding her breath as the skateboard rumbled toward the top step—​and then tipped off into nothingness. Her heart pounded and her hands went clammy as she stared down at the landing. But she stayed steady, arms out, balancing her body and keeping the nose of the board up as the back wheels found the edge of the next step and the next . . .
     She hit the landing hard and skidded around the corner, grazing the wall with one elbow, but not slowing down. Only then did she get a good look at the second flight of steps. It was even longer than the first flight, and steeper, too. As the wheels left the ground, Izzy felt as if she’d just jumped off a cliff . . .
     “Steer!” Jess shouted from somewhere above her. “You’re going crooked!”
     But Izzy was frozen, staring down at the ground rushing up toward her. She felt herself part ways from her board, and it was only when her shoulder hit the solid concrete wall of the stairwell that she snapped out of it, barely keeping her balance to avoid falling down the last few steps. Her skateboard, on the other hand . . .
     CRASH!
     The board hit the window and shattered it, glass flying everywhere. Izzy’s whole body went cold, and she felt herself start to shake. What had she done?
     “Whoa!” Jess exclaimed. “Let’s get out of here!”
     Izzy heard her friend’s running feet. A second later, several people burst out of the restaurant.
     “You!” a stern-looking woman shouted, pointing at Izzy. “Stop right there!”

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews