Beginners (The Gymnasts, #1) by Elizabeth Levy


Beginners (The Gymnasts, #1)
Title : Beginners (The Gymnasts, #1)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0590440500
ISBN-10 : 9780590440509
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 121
Publication : First published July 1, 1988

They were more than friends - they were a team.
The new gymnastics club was going to be terrific. Cindi, Lauren, Darlene and Jodi knew they'd be friends from the first day they met. Coach Harmon said they'd be in a real gymnastics meet right away, even if they were only beginners.
Now they had to learn how to be a team.


Beginners (The Gymnasts, #1) Reviews


  • Katie

    Again, I was obsessed with gymnastics when I was in gradeschool (and I little bit in junior high) and I read all of the books in The Gymnasts series I could get my hands on. (Think Babysitters club, but with gymnastics and no babysitting... ;)

  • Amy

    One of My Favorite Series Growing Up!! I read this entire series 30 times during the early 1990s.

  • SkatingAndDanceFan

    Okay, so I read it a very long time ago, but it made a huge impression on me back then. I wanted to be one of the team!

  • Kate H

    This series is a bit cheesy but I loved it growing up because I always wanted to take gymnastics but we did not have the funds to afford it. It is fairly realistic in the level of skill that girls obtain and it gives you plenty of gymnastics whilst still allowing for real lie stories and difficulties in the books.

  • Oxalis

    Entertaining enough for a kids' book, but I didn't think it was anything special. I also noticed more than a few typos. I felt compelled to pick it up because of my interest in gymnastics and my nostalgia for Apple Paperbacks. I can imagine reading this series as a kid.

  • Katie Fitzgerald

    When she was eight years old, Lauren quit gymnastics. Now she and her friend Cyndi have joined up again, this time at a real studio with a coach who expects all the girls to perform competitively. Lauren’s not convinced she has what it takes, and an older bully is no help in building her confidence, but with help from coach Patrick and new teammates Darlene and Jodi, she wants to prove that she can live up to her potential.

    I remember Elizabeth Levy best from her Something Queer books illustrated by Mordicai Gerstein, but I also recall seeing The Gymnasts series in my elementary school when she came to visit on Author’s Day one year. I was never interested in sports as a kid, so I definitely wouldn’t have read this series even if someone suggested it, but I can see now that I probably would have enjoyed it. Lauren has a funny, spunky personality, and like The Baby-sitters Club, the series focuses on several girls, giving each reader someone to potentially relate to.

    I don’t know much about gymnastics, but based on some of the contemporary books I’ve read about the sport (the McKenna books and Dominique Moceanu’s new book), it seems like it hasn’t changed very much in 24 years. Much of the same vocabulary I encountered in those contemporary stories is also present here, and only one reference to Mary Lou Retton dates the book specifically to the 80s. Otherwise, this book reads like a contemporary series book, just without the usual references to texting and email. Even the camcorder and videotape which figure so heavily into a side plot involving an older bully could easily be replaced with a digital camera and a DVD without changing the story itself in any way.

    This book also reminded me of how much I used to love chapter titles as a kid. Any time I tried writing a story, I always divided it into chapters just so I could write catchy little titles. I don’t see chapter titles very often in series books these days, but it’s an aspect of kids’ books I really miss. I also like the way this book shows a gymnast in a different pose at the start of each chapter. I don’t think those little icons have much to do with the content of the individual chapters, but they are visually appealing, and I wish more series books had nice little touches like that to enhance the reading experience. (The Sleuth or Dare series does this with fingerprints, and it looks great.)

    I am still not crazy enough about gymnastics, so I doubt I’ll be running out to track down the other 21 titles in this series, but I am glad to have satisfied my curiosity about what my younger self missed.

  • Sally

    Mad love for this series when I was a seven-year-old gymnast myself!

    ETA: re-read 24/02/13... wow, I had forgotten what an evil bitch Becky was! I mean when she first appeared I heard the Wicked Witch of the West music in my head but

    Also this book made me remember why I stopped doing gym when I was ten, because I was scared of falling off everything :P I was SO in my element on the floor but the uneven bars scared the shit out of me, and if I had a dollar for every time I fell off the beam I could have BOUGHT THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE AND HAD CHANGE TO SPARE.

  • Susie

    I actually didn't like reading when I was little (something I still find amazing, as I am now a librarian and have devoted my life to books). Out of desperation, my mom bought me this; at the time, I was 8 years old and still convinced I was going to the Olympics (um, I am 6 feet tall now). I ended up devouring the series and I firmly believe it is what taught me the love of reading. I can never thank Elizabeth Levy enough, she literally changed my life with this book.

  • Alexis

    So I read this series back in the day and recently found four of them in a used book store. Not high quality literature, but for fans of gymnastics, they are entertaining. And I'd search for the entire series one by one but that would get a bit tedious.

  • Kelly

    I think this is a good book. Good is all I can say becasue it not very intresting untill the end. This is a slow book and at the end it is exciting because it is full wiht revenge. I love the ending and you can read it over and over again!

  • liz

    this is really a good book. the pinecones learn a lot about sticking together and never giving up.

  • Torey

    Quick read= quick summary:

    AWESOME BOOK!!!!

  • Leslie

    I did gymnastics as a kid, so I liked these books. Also for some reason, I really wanted my name to be Darlene after reading them.

  • beatricks

    holy shit I remember this

    well mostly I remember the cover