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By James Heneghan
- Published
by Orca Books in USA and Canada, 2006
Selected for the Ontario Library
Association's list of Best Bests, 2006
-
The
2008 Ontario Library Association Forest of Reading readers'
choice Golden Oak award
-
The
Sheila
A. Egoff BC Book Prize for Children's Literature,
2007
- The Chocolate
Lily Book Award (Novel/Chapter Book category), 2007-08
"...Teachers in particular will find this text useful. "
Quill & Quire
"The
story moves quickly, and Liam's experiences will definitely help kids
realize the reality of what life has been like in Northern Ireland, during
the time of the Troubles."
- Bookstore Girl, cantstopreading.blogspot.com
"It
will appeal to reluctant readers, especially males."
Kliatt
SYNOPSIS
Told
in James' trademark atmospheric voice, twelve-year-old Liam is on the
run after his parents are murdered by the IRA. This headlong edge-of-the-seat
race through the treacherous world of contemporary Belfast, is both an
exciting adventure and a primer on the history of the conflict in Northern
Ireland and the futility of tit-for-tat revenge.
REVIEWS
FROM HAZEL
ROCHMAN IN BOOKLIST. Readers will be drawn by the fast action and the
breathless escape adventure, but they’ll also respond to the politics
of war in Belfast. In his grief Liam remembers his father’s love
(“No man ever wore a scarf as warm as the arms of a child”)
and Da’s belief that there was no important difference between Catholics
and Protestants––that just a few were to blame for the violence
and hatred. The message against revenge, with the famous quote from Gandhi
(“an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind”), is part
of the drama. True to the boy’s viewpoint, the betrayal and terrorism
is very close, especially in the unforgettable images of what is lost.
FROM KEEGAN,
AGE 13, IN KIDSWWRITE (www.kalwriters.com/kidswwwrite, July 2007). Safe
House is an awesome book filled with thrills and adventure. It’s
very suspenseful, and for me, was almost impossible to put down. I would
recommend it to readers above the age of 13 because it is a little violent
at some points. This reviewer gives Safe House 5 thrilling stars.
FROM DOTSY
HARLAND IN VOICE OF YOUTH ADVOCATES (VOYA) - (December, 2006). This stark,
tight thriller starts off with a bang and does not stop racing until the
Mole is caught. Heneghan's juxtaposition of Liam's terror with comforting
flashbacks of his gentle, intelligent parents keeps the reader tense but
sympathetic. To help teens understand more clearly the conflict between
Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland, the author provides a helpful
appendix of important dates in Irish history. Heneghan's poignant adventure
story will be relished by most teen readers. VOYA CODES: 5Q 4P M J (Hard
to imagine it being any better written; Broad general YA appeal; Middle
School, defined as grades 6 to 8; Junior High, defined as grades 7 to
9).
FROM SHERRI
FORGASH GINSBERG (LIBRARIAN, PASADENA, CA) IN KLIATT (NOVEMBER, 2006).
Safe House tells an intriguing story of a murder that takes place in Ireland
in 1999... This murder is seen as part of the struggle in Ireland between
Protestants and Catholics that has gone on since 1170 AD, when the King
of England also declared himself the King of Ireland. The story illuminates
a topic that rarely makes it into YA fiction. It will appeal to reluctant
readers, especially males. (J--Recommended for junior high school students.
The contents are of particular interest to young adolescents and their
teachers.)
FROM THE
BRANDON SUN (January, 2007). Whoa! The first page offers a gruesome and
startling beginning to Liam’s life on the run. Despite the Good
Friday peace accord, the tension between Catholics and Protestants
is ever-present. His parents are brutally murdered and Liam sees one of
their murderers! Now, he must run for his own life while trying to keep
his friends and neighbors out of harm’s way. A safe house seems
the solution to his predicament. Wrong! It is at this haven that he is
further betrayed. The action is nonstop, the treachery terrifying and
Liam’s life in constant peril. You should read it!
FROM DAVE
JENKINSON IN CM MAGAZINE (September 1, 2006). Recommended, *** stars/4.
...On the one hand, Safe House can simply be read as a thriller,
one filled with lots of action which occurs over a period of less than
two weeks during which time Liam must three times flee from his homicidal
pursuer. However, the book’s happenings take place against the background
of the Troubles, the attempts by Irish Catholics to unite the divided
Ireland while the Loyalists, largely Protestants, try to keep Northern
Ireland within the United Kingdom. Consequently, Safe House also offers
middle school readers an opportunity to gain some preliminary insights
into this conflict. Dave Jenkinson teaches courses in children’s
and adolescent literature in the Faculty of Education, the University
of Manitoba.
EXCERPT
FROM CHAPTER ONE
It was the
perfect night for a murder: one o’clock on a dark and rainy Monday
morning in early July. It had been a poor summer so far: so much wind
and rain; more like winter.
The victim
and his wife were sleeping.
The two men
wore black balaclava masks. One of the men was big, with wide shoulders.
The second man, tall and slim, gave the nod. The big man lowered a shoulder
and crashed through the front door. They raced up the stairs, guns at
the ready.
The victims
were in the front bedroom, the one above the narrow street. They struggled
to throw back the covers and leap out of bed but it was too late. The
two murderers charged in, spraying the room with bullets. The man and
woman did not have a chance: they were dead before their bodies hit the
wall. One of the men switched on the light and they fired off a dozen
more rounds, just to be sure.
In the bedroom
across the hall a boy was awake, deafened and terrified by the noise.
He tried but could not move from his bed. Through his open door he could
see masked men with guns. He smelled the smoke and powder from the guns,
sharp like fireworks, like the house was on fire. He managed to get his
feet on the floor but could not stand; his legs refused to support him.
Though his ears were ringing from the violence of the explosions, he could
hear the gunmen laughing and swearing and he wanted to run, but was tethered
to his bed with fear. He was sure they had killed his Mum and his Da—for
who could survive such firepower?—and now they would kill him. He
had to get out of the house before they discovered him. But he couldn’t
move. His knees gave way and he slid off the bed onto the floor, unable
to take his eyes off the men and their guns across the narrow hallway.
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