Shooting Star
by Fredrick McKissack, Jr.

    SHOOTING STAR by Fredrick McKissack, Jr.
    Category:  Contemporary
    Age Recommendation:  Grades 9+
    Release Date:  8/25/09
    Publisher:  Atheneum
    Reviewed by:  Sally Kruger, aka "Readingjunky"
    Rating:  5 Stars


    Jomo Rodgers has big football dreams; unfortunately, he's not big.  His coach praises his competitive attitude and
    his hustle, but he always ends his comments with, "If only ...."  Jomo knows he means, if only he was bigger.

    At the coach's suggestion, Jomo begins an aggressive training program between his sophomore and junior year.  
    With the help of Jeri, the team's strength training coach, he is able to start building some muscle and increasing his
    weight.  Just like most young athletes, Jomo doesn't think it is happening fast enough, so he looks to another source.  
    He hooks up with Ganz, a college chemistry major who is selling a product he says will make Jomo a star.

    Just two weeks after beginning the steroid injections, Jomo notices a difference - and so do his coaches and
    teammates.  Getting the money to continue using is not a problem, but keeping it a secret might prove to be.  

    His football situation is improving, but things at home are not.  His father, a college professor, has started ending
    each evening drunk, and Jomo's mother recently moved to Seattle to advance her art career, so she is not around to
    keep things running smoothly.  Even with his success on the football field and admiring calls from college recruiters,
    side-effects from the steroids have Jomo's life spiraling out of control.

    SHOOTING STAR by Fredrick McKissack, Jr. focuses on the player side of steroid use.  What pushes a player
    to use the illegal substance knowing that discovery will end a career?  Why does a player continue using when things
    obviously get out of hand?  SHOOTING STAR is an attention grabber.  It will interest not only sports fans, but
    anyone looking for a story about the drive to succeed against personal odds.  It is a real page-turner that I couldn't
    put down.