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So You Want To Be A Stunt Performer - So You Want To Be A... 24

Formats: E-Book, Paperback

Ages: 8-11, 12-15

What does it actually take to fall off a building for a living — and walk away every single time?

Stunt performers are among the most skilled, disciplined, and invisible professionals in the movie industry. They train for years across martial arts, gymnastics, precision driving, high falls, wire work, fire, and water — mastering each discipline so completely that real danger is replaced by extraordinary preparation. And yet most audiences never think about them at all. That is the job done right.

So You Want To Be A Stunt Performer opens this fearless, fascinating career for kids ages 10 to 14 who want to know how it really works. Not just the spectacular moments caught on camera, but the months of choreography, rehearsal, physics, and problem-solving that make those moments possible. This is nonfiction that treats young readers as equals — curious, capable, and ready for the real story.

Inside, you will learn how fight choreography is designed across multiple combat styles so every hit looks devastating but no one gets hurt. You will discover how stunt performers train in precision driving and motorcycle work at speeds that would be catastrophic without total technical mastery. You will see how high falls are calculated so the physics of impact is never left to chance, and how fire stunts are performed with a calm built entirely on preparation rather than recklessness.

You will also meet the team that surrounds every stunt — coordinators, riggers, safety specialists, and camera operators working together so that a three-second moment in a movie is planned and executed with surgical precision. You will explore the history of stunt performance and the legendary performers who shaped the action filmmaking we know today. And you will find out what young people can start doing right now — the sports, the training, the mindset — to discover if this career might be their path.

Richly illustrated and thoroughly researched, this guide covers the science behind controlled danger, the physical and mental demands of the profession, and the real jobs and career steps that lead from training to the set. It is honest about what the work costs and what it demands, because kids who dream big deserve answers that match the size of their ambition.

The greatest compliment a stunt performer can receive is an audience that never once thinks about them — because all they see is the story. If you are the kind of reader who watches the impossible and immediately wonders how it was done, this book was written for you.

Reviews

In an era of viral 'daredevil' videos and Computer-Generated Imagery (CGI) saturated blockbusters, Linda Soules' So You Want To Be A Stunt Performer arrives as a much-needed reality check. Far from a collection of 'don't try this at home' warnings or a celebratory reel of explosions, Soules presents a sophisticated, well-researched look at stunt work as a rigorous discipline rooted in engineering, physics, and radical responsibility. The book's central thesis directly challenges the 'adrenaline junkie' archetype. Soules argues that the defining quality of a stunt professional is not reckless courage, but precision under controlled conditions. She structures the narrative around a simple but vital framework: 1) plan the action; 2) engineer the safety; and 3) execute with precision. By beginning with the debunking of the 'fearlessness' myth, Soules sets a mature tone for her younger audience. She illustrates that a performer's job is to create the illusion of danger while being the safest person on set. Soules excels when she dives into the 'how' of the industry. The book deconstructs the formal breakdown process, showing how a few seconds of screen time result from hours of script analysis, hazard identification, and mathematical calculations. Technical insights include detailed looks at airbags, wire rigs, and fire-retardant materials. Also covered is how equipment ratings and measurements dictate the limits of a fall or crash. Even the pivotal role of the Stunt Coordinator is covered, who holds the power to 'veto' any action that isn't perfectly prepared. Rather than viewing stunts as 'acts of chaos,' Soules frames falling, fighting, and driving as learned technical skills. She emphasizes that a stunt performer is, first and foremost, an actor and an athlete. The book highlights the necessity of understanding physics in motion, staying calm to ensure exact timing, and working in total sync with riggers, medics, and directors. One of the book's strongest segments is the 'day-in-the-life' sequence. It strips away the cinematic magic to reveal a world of safety meetings, repetitive rehearsals, and 'costume matching.' For a young reader, this is perhaps the most vital lesson: most of the job involves waiting, checking equipment, and refining small movements rather than experiencing constant 'on-camera excitement.' Soules doesn't shy away from the profession's history. By profiling icons like Dar Robinson, Zoë Bell, and Jackie Chan, she connects the field's innovation to its costs. She honestly discusses how past injuries and accidents paved the way for the strict modern standards that protect today's performers. This historical context reinforces the idea that the 'right to refuse' unsafe work is not a sign of weakness, but a professional obligation. So You Want To Be A Stunt Performer is an essential resource for children, teens, and educators. It replaces the fantasy of the 'daredevil' with an informed respect for the safety culture that makes action cinema possible. Soules successfully positions stunt work at the intersection of athletics and physics, offering aspiring performers a path built on discipline and ethics rather than risk. It is a serious, accessible, and ultimately inspiring guide to a profession that is often misunderstood but rarely unappreciated.

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