Young Adult Fiction Mystery & Detective
Tru Detective
- Publisher
- Orca Book Publishers
- Initial publish date
- Mar 2015
- Category
- Mystery & Detective, Law & Crime, Mysteries & Detective Stories
- Recommended Age
- 12
- Recommended Grade
- 8 to 12
- Recommended Reading age
- 12
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781459803794
- Publish Date
- Mar 2015
- List Price
- $19.95
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781459803817
- Publish Date
- Mar 2015
- List Price
- $24.99
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Truman’s parents are out of town, and he has made plans with his girlfriend, Natalia. When she doesn’t show up, he is angry. But when he finds out she has been murdered, Truman becomes the prime suspect. With no alibi, he must try to find the truth behind his girlfriend’s violent death. But the more he digs, the more he realizes he doesn’t really know who Natalia was, and he starts to wonder why she was interested in him at all. Hounded by suspicious detectives, angry Russian mobsters and a sense that nothing is as it seems, Truman is in a race to save himself.
This is the second eye-catching graphic novel from award-winning author Norah McClintock.
About the authors
Norah McClintock est l’auteure de plus de 40 livres, dont ceux des collections Chloe & Levesque, Mike & Riel et Robyn Hunter Mysteries, tous publiés chez Scholastic Canada. Les livres de Norah ont été traduits dans une douzaine de langues. Elle a remporté le prix Arthur Ellis dans la catégorie du meilleur roman policier jeunesse et beaucoup d’autres récompenses. Native de Montréal, Norah a obtenu un baccalauréat en histoire de l’Université McGill. Une mer de chagrin est son premier roman historique. «Il est temps d’utiliser toutes ces connaissances en histoire», a-t-elle dit. Norah vit maintenant à Toronto.
Norah McClintock is the author of Tell and Snitch, both Orca Soundings novels. Norah lives in Toronto, Ontario.
Norah McClintock's profile page
Steven P. Hughes is an award-winning Canadian illustrator whose clients include the Globe and Mail, Reader's Digest and Scientific American. He graduated from Sheridan College with a BAA in Illustration. He lives in Bolton, Ontario, with his wife and their two dogs.
Editorial Reviews
"An appealing thriller for reluctant readers. The story is gripping and will hold onto readers to the last page."
VOYA
"[McClintock] repeats her success in creating a fast-paced narrative of teen characters involved in mystery...The writing is simple, as befits the graphic novel format, in which illustrations provide much of the emotion and action."
Resource Links
"With a story that unspools across the pages, laying out clues and the details as it goes, this mystery begs to be read in one sitting. Stark black-and-white illustrations give the book a noir feel that contrasts with the youth of the main character but doesn’t conflict with it—instead it makes Truman’s journey into the darkness of Natalia’s story more powerful... A mystery graphic novel, beautifully done."
School Library Journal
"McClintock follows I, Witness (2012) with another highly engaging suspense graphic novel geared toward struggling readers...Hughes imparts lots of information and characterization in his angular grayscale art, which depicts the story from Tru’s perspective. The appealing layout and compelling story, as well as the straightforward dialogue, make this very accessible to a wide audience, both reluctant and struggling readers as well as those looking for a pulse-pounding thriller."
Booklist
"McClintock has crafted a solid, appealing mystery, especially for newcomers to the genre...Readers will be caught up in Truman’s struggles, the perils he finds himself in, and the awareness he develops of both himself and others. Hughes’ black-and-white art builds on and supports the noir elements of McClintock’s storytelling with a stark, cinematic quality, leavened with occasional flashes of wit and sly humour. Tru Detective benefits from an of-the-moment quality, not just in its larger strokes—the way characters talk and interact, and plot elements including human trafficking, forced sex work, and illegal immigration—but in its finer details, such as the omnipresence of cellphones and their role in the mystery. Though most of them will never experience the kind of drama the story presents, adolescent readers will feel right at home."
Quill & Quire