How Angel Peterson Got His Name: And Other Outrageous Tales about Extreme Sports

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When you grow up in a small town in the north woods, you have to make your own excitement. High spirits, idiocy, and showing off for the girls inspire Gary Paulsen and his friends to attempt:
• Shooting waterfalls in a barrel • The first skateboarding • Jumping three barrels like motorcycle daredevil Evel Knievel–except they only have bikes • Hangliding with an Army surplus target kite • Bungee jumping • Wrestling . . . a bear?
Extreme sports lead to extreme fun in new tales from Gary's boyhood.

Author Biography: Gary Paulsen is the distinguished author of many critically acclaimed books for young people. His most recent Delacorte books are Guts and Caught by the Sea.

111 pages, Paperback

First published January 14,2003

Literary awards

About the author

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Gary James Paulsen was an American writer of children's and young adult fiction, best known for coming-of-age stories about the wilderness. He was the author of more than 200 books and wrote more than 200 magazine articles and short stories, and several plays, all primarily for teenagers. He won the Margaret Edwards Award from the American Library Association in 1997 for his lifetime contribution in writing for teens.

Community Reviews

Rating(3.8 / 5.0, 100 votes)
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25(25%)
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43(43%)
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100 reviews All reviews
April 17,2025
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A funny, laugh out loud book about the antics of a group of young men as they seek thrills and adventures of post-WWII American life.
April 17,2025
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Definitely, the adult in me was laughing at Angel Peterson. I was chuckling out loud while reading this book. My favorite story was when the boys went to the tent revival meeting and threw crab apples on the roof to mimic the “footsteps of God” just as the preacher was saying those words. When Orvis is caught, he inexplicably gives Archie’s name and that makes for even more trouble. As is his custom, Orvis devises his own punishment, which is much worse than what Archie had in store for him! Orvis was my favorite character. His encounter with the bear was equally hysterical and terrifying. What boys will do to get the attention of a girl!
I enjoyed reading Paulson’s “A Note of Caution”. I was expecting the standard wording about don’t try this at home, but Paulson is quite clever in his approach. He notes that they would have worn safety gear if it had been available, but ends by saying “…none of what we did should be done by anybody except heavily insured, highly trained professionals under adult supervision on closed courses with ambulances, doctors and MedEvac choppers standing by”. I also thought teens would like how Paulson would compare his antics to the extreme sports of today. For example, Harris’s exploits with tractor tires are described as “what might have been the first bungee jump.”
The cover illustration and wording might attract younger teens to this book. My 13 year old son picked up Angel Peterson and read most of it in one sitting. He really enjoyed it since it is “all about 13 year old boys”. He also let me know that the world speed record on skis is much faster today. I laughed and said please don’t get any ideas about trying to break that record
April 17,2025
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All I can say is thank the lord Gary Paulsen and his friends lived through all of these insane shenanigans so that Paulsen could grow up to write some amazing books. I'm almost hesitant to give this book to a child because if it makes me want to make a homemade skateboard and make my own backyard bungee setup, I can't imagine what it would spur in a 10-year-old. Paulsen, for his part, does seem to recognize this danger and put a large disclaimer at the front of the book (although he does also insinuate that it was a proud day when he realized his son was following in his footsteps by peeing on an electric fence and almost frying his junk off).
April 17,2025
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I loved this book. I snorted, I giggled, I guffawed.

I recommended it to students and they find it just as much fun to read. I have recommended it to adults and they love it.

Paulsen gets kids. He understands the art of never growing old, of enjoying life, of being a little kid in a big body.

This book is tremendous fun. I highly recommend it.
April 17,2025
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David and I really enjoyed reading this book. It is a 6.0 on the AR reading list. It's about boys (probably David's age) and the stupid things they do trying to break records and experimenting with wind, flight, and generally dangerous things. It is very humorously written. I laughed out loud several times. The only reason to use caution in reading it, is it makes mention of one older boy having a picture of a half-naked woman on his steering wheel...it also mentions one boy searching for "purely educational" pictures of half-naked African women at the library. These are quite briefly mentioned, but enough to be annoying. I try to read everything before David reads it, and of course, that wasn't the case for this book. But if you read it out loud to your child, you can skip the few places that need to be skipped. Tons of fun.
April 17,2025
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By the time I bounced over the bonnet of a moving Austin Allegro when I was eight (absolutely the unsexiest car with which to experience a brush with death) and landed head first on the road, giving myself a pretty good scar on my left temple in the process, I had used up a few of my nine lives already. I'd fallen from a first floor balcony, almost drowned in a swimming pool in Spain, very nearly fallen out of a window onto concrete twenty feet below while doing a Popeye the Sailor Man impersonation, and plummeted from the branches of a spruce tree after climbing way too high. My antics are pretty tame in comparison with the mayhem gotten up to by the boys Gary Paulsen grew up with though. They're equal parts hilarious and hair-raising. I'm not really sure what it is about boys, but we just seem to think 'I wonder what would happen if...' way too often. My boy is five, and so far we've only had one trip to A&E, for a fairly minor incident. I'm hoping it stays that way, but the odds are not great...
April 17,2025
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I remember Gary Paulsen being side-stitch funny. But he’s rough for my kids (10). Much alcoholism, child abandonment, near death dumb ideas
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