Keeper (novel)

Keeper  

First edition cover
Author(s) Mal Peet
Cover artist Yves St. Laurent
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Children's, Sports novel
Publisher Walker Books
Publication date 6th Oct 2003
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 240 pp (first edition, paperback)
ISBN 0744590256
OCLC Number 60376723
LC Classification PZ7.P3564 Kee 2003

Keeper is a fictional sports novel for children by Mal Peet, published on October 6, 2003 by Walker Books Ltd. The novel takes the form of an interview by Paul Faustino in which the world's best goalkeeper, El Gato (meaning "The Cat"), tells his life story. Keeper won the Branford Boase Award in 2004 and was shortlisted for the Hampshire Book Award that same year.

Contents

Synopsis

Paul Faustino, a journalist for La Nación, is interviewing El Gato about his recent World Cup win. During the interview, El Gato tells Faustino about his teenage years and his entry into soccer. When El Gato tells Faustino that he is coached by a ghost known to El Gato as "the Keeper,"[1] Faustino thinks El Gato is lying to him. However, El Gato seems honest and looks like he is telling the truth.[2]

El Gato continues to tell the interviewer his story. As a teenager, he secretly trains with the Keeper in an abandoned soccer field hidden in the rainforest. The young El Gato convinces his parents his time in the rainforest is the result of his fascination with nature. His family takes him for a naturalist, buying him collection materials and calling him "Professor."[3] The charade continues until El Gato turns 15, when he is expected to start working in the logging industry with his father. He does not tell the Keeper that he will no longer come to practice.

His first Saturday at work he finds out that his co-workers play a game of soccer after work. His co-workers invite him to play as the goalkeeper and, in his first game since his training with the Keeper, he helps his team win. The next Saturday, he plays with a new player who the others call "El Ladron", meaning "the thief." In reality, El Ladron is a director for a soccer camp named DSJ. He also brings the owners of the team, Mr. and Mrs. DaSilva to the games. They want to sign El Gato for a two year contract and give him 10,000 dollars. This begins his professional soccer career.

Finally, El Gato reveals to Paul Faustino that he cheated in the second last penalty shot of the World Cup.

El Gato tells Faustino that he wants the interview to be a book. Faustino hesitates because he has to give this interview to his boss. However, he changes his mind and helps El Gato turn his interview into a book. El Gato eventually quits soccer and becomes a naturalist, just as his parents had always imagined. At the end of the novel, El Gato explains the Keeper's history as a real player.

Characters

In Keeper, there are three main characters. The first character that will be written about is El Gato, the protagonist of the story. El Gato is actually just a nickname. He is a huge man who normally is very quiet. He is a world cup winning goal keeper, and throughout the story he is telling a soccer reporter his past in an interview. El Gato’s mentor was a mysterious man referred to ‘The Keeper’ and nothing more. The Keeper was somewhat of a phantom, and one doesn’t learn much about him in the story, besides always wearing a hat that obscures his eyes, and also his amazing gift of goalkeeping. The last character was a reporter, whose name is Paul Faustino. He wants to do the interview to receive a big bonus from his boss, because Paul is obsessed with money.

Bibliography

Peet, Mal. Keeper. Candlewick Press: Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2005. ISBN 076362749

Notes

  1. ^ Peet, p. 19
  2. ^ Peet, p. 33
  3. ^ Peet, p. 54

External links