Author having a ball
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Jeff Benson
A quick guessing game. Who is this?
“Kick me or boot me, hard or with finesse.
When I play in the mud, I become a mess.
I like to roll around,
And on the grass is where I will be found.
I’m a special ball, you can bump me with your head.
But use your foot, I prefer instead.”
Surprise! It’s a soccer ball, one of the bouncier, rotund
characters found in Cari Garfield’s new book, “After All, I’m Just a
Ball.”
Garfield, a Lido Isle resident and tennis coach at the Marriott
Newport Beach, recently issued her second children’s book to bridge
her loves of poetry and sports in a form palatable for children as
young as 5.
All kinds of sports balls come to life in the illustrated book --
each with its own personality -- and they try to make children guess
which sports they represent. Among those personified are tennis
balls, racquetballs, volleyballs, baseballs, ping pong balls and polo
balls -- chased by a horse, of course.
Balls can be round or oblong, big or small. They can soar over
walls, knock down pins or trickle into holes. And they can bounce
high or bounce nigh.
“I’ve always been infatuated with the balls,” said Garfield, 43.
“I used to draw balls, and when I was doodling in school I’d always
draw them with faces and make them alive. I think they’re just happy,
probably because sports has kept me happy.
“I think of it as a fun thing that’s kept me alive.”
Garfield has taught tennis for 15 years at the Newport Beach
Marriott. A former state champion and two-time All-American doubles
player in college, Garfield added to her athletic talents with
degrees in English and in telecommunications. She retired from the
pro tennis tour at 30 and decided to devote her time to coaching.
She currently coaches “kids” as young as 5 and as old as 80, and
volunteers to reads her book to classrooms in the Newport-Mesa area
and in Laguna Niguel and Huntington Beach.
Andersen Elementary School students Annika Gerken, 12, and her
10-year-old sister, Marika, have each taken tennis lessons from
Garfield for two years. The sisters said they enjoyed the book,
having read rough drafts before it came out.
“You guess which ball it is, and the pictures made the balls come
alive. It was really fun,” Annika said.
Marika enjoyed the book’s rhymes and thought it was funny. But her
true emphasis was on the fact that her tennis coach is so in tune
with her students.
“That’s really cool, because we can talk to her and see what she’s
doing and how she writes it,” Marika said.
When Garfield reads to students at their schools, she can barely
get past the first sentence before students pick up on which type of
ball she’s introducing, she said.
“They always shout it out,” Garfield said. “I tell them to put up
their hands and guess what kind of ball’s talking. They can’t wait to
say it. This one’s really brought out a lot of excitement.”
She wrote her first book, “Cari’s Characters,” in 1992 while she
was on the tennis tour. “Cari’s Characters” is a collection of random
children’s poems that urges children not to be afraid of the dark and
teaches them how to tie their shoelaces, among other things.
“After All, I’m Just a Ball ...” will be released Jan. 31 and is
available for purchase at https://www.authorhouse.com and at
bookstores nationwide.
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