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Children's Fiction General

I, The Spy

by (author) Allison Maher

Publisher
Thistledown Press
Initial publish date
Nov 2006
Category
General, Spies & Spying
Recommended Age
10 to 14
Recommended Grade
5 to 9
Recommended Reading age
7 to 12
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781897235041
    Publish Date
    Nov 2006
    List Price
    $13.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

Fifteen-year-old Andrew has cool parents: his mother's job is to discover and test electronic surveillance gear and covert law enforcement equipment; while his father is an environmental biologist and cook. What vaults Andrew and his family into action is a new guy, Brian Fiske; he shows up in their small village of Aylesworth with a very dark secret.

Brian and his family are in the witness-protection program and are now in relocation. However, when the mobsters that Brian's family have put into prison come looking for revenge and kidnap them, the adventure is on.

Armed only with their intelligence and high-tech gadgetry, Brian and Andrew must find a way to foil the kidnapers and find safety. Andrew's instincts -- along with his mother's electronic skills and his father's biological savvy -- lead him on a suspenseful rescue mission that could end up in success or disaster. The measure of success will be in their ability to take responsibility for others and act quickly.

This often lyrical and always thought-provoking memoir asks questions that confront many of us: What do we know, for sure, about our childhoods? Does a lively imagination enrich a life or blind us to opportunities? What choices shaped the path our lives have followed? In thirty short chapters, Jo-Ann Wallace take us on a journey from girlhood to elderhood, from one conundrum to another, with the crackle of synaptic energy flashing in the gaps -- in what isn't revealed, isn't told.

The book parachutes us into working-class English Montreal in the 1950s and 1960s, into young womanhood in Toronto in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and then into professional life in Edmonton from the 1980s through the 2000s. "White Swan, Black Swan" delves into childhood games, and how the subconscious power dynamic between a younger and an older sister lets their imaginations fly free of their small shared bedroom. "Melmac" starts with that quintessentially mid-century dinnerware rattling around in an old motorhome as the author ponders the obsessive collecting of objects as a quirky coping strategy, an outlet for the stresses of contemporary working life. "Whimsy" takes us from the classic Jimmy Stewart movie "Harvey," with its 6 foot 3 1/2 inch rabbit to her own imaginary childhood friend, a Scottie dog, and to a present friend who will not watch any movie based in "whimsy." What dangers arise, the author wonders, when imaginations go unexamined, and unexercised.

The many disparate pieces of the author's life are like an intricately worked mosaic, while the title, A Life in Pieces, foreshadows the final chapters that unfold with tenderness and awe in the wake of a cancer diagnosis.

About the author

Allison Maher is a former manager of a company that invented spy gear. She now resides on a small farm in rural Nova Scotia. Her first novel for young readers, I, The Spy, was shortlisted for the Red Cedar Award in 2008-2009.

Allison Maher's profile page

Librarian Reviews

I, The Spy

Fifteen-year-old Andrew’s parents have cool jobs. His mother tests and discovers electronic surveillance gear and spy equipment, and his father is an environmental biologist and cook. When new guy Brian Fiske and his family move to town with a dark secret, Andrew is vaulted to action. Brian and his family are in the witness protection program, but the people they helped put in prison are looking for them. Andrew must use all of his intelligence and high-tech gadgetry to save Brian and his family, and to get to them before the kidnappers get them to their destination.

This debut YA novel from Allison Maher will have boys on the edge of their seats. Perfect for the wannabe spy, kids will envy the “toys” that Andrew has at his fingertips. From start to finish this is a high action story, and the incorporation of these technologies into the novel add to the interest level.

At the same time however, the use of shifting perspective does not work as fluidly as it should for this type of story. Shifting from Andrew’s first person narration to the third-person for Brian, it occasionally becomes confusing and choppy. As well, the plot is a bit too improbable, and older readers may find it difficult to swallow their disbelief that the kidnappers would overlook Brian’s backpack full of spy equipment, or that he could so easily escape his bindings without notice. Andrew’s daring plot for rescue is exciting storytelling, and propels the action forward, but is again, somewhat unrealistic.

These difficulties should not however deter reluctant readers from picking up and enjoying the story. It is well written and interesting, and should find wide appeal with today’s high-tech kids.

Source: The Canadian Children's Bookcentre. Summer 2006. Vol.29 No. 3.

I, The Spy

Andrew’s courage and instincts – along with his parents’ electronic surveillance skills and biological savvy – are put to the test on a suspenseful mission against mobsters.

Source: The Canadian Children’s Book Centre. Canadian Children’s Book News. 2007.

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