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Searching... R.H. Stafford Library (Woodbury) | J FICTION AVI | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Stillwater Public Library | J MYSTERY AVI | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
John Huffam is sure the tall man's beard is false. He's sure of little else in November 1849, the year he is fourteen, the year his father is sentenced to London's Whitecross Street Prison.
Maybe the man following John -- who claims to be one Inspector Copperfield -- can explain why. Surely, Pa isn't prepared to reveal the truth, any more than the jovial bailiff, Mr. Tuckum, who knows something, but remains mum. Or the little Frenchman, Mr. Farquatt, who courts John's sister but seems most keen on Pa's work at the Naval Ordinance Office. Or Mr. O'Doul, the Irishman who insists Pa owes him the unimaginable sum of three hundred pounds.
Or what of the one-legged, single-mindedly fierce Sergeant Muldspoon, John's teacher? What about the boy's great-great-aunt, Lady Euphemia Huffam, who could pay the debt but won't for reasons of her own? What about the secretive Mr. Snugsbe of All Hallows Church, who hides himself away in the City's most voluminous coat?
Then there's Chief Inspector Ratchet of Scotland Yard, who is after somebody for some crime or other. True, John has a new friend and ally in Sary the Sneak...but what has even she got up her sleeve?
What John learns on his own is that there's a traitor on the loose, somewhere. And he must uncover the villain -- no matter who it might be.
Author Notes
Avi was born in 1937, in the city of New York and raised in Brooklyn. He began his writing career as a playwright, and didn't start writing childrens books until he had kids of his own.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Avi lifts a few facts from Charles Dickens's biography to spin this action-packed tale of secret identities, double-dealing and betrayal, set in mid-19th-century London. John Huffam (the middle names of Charles J.H. Dickens) is 14, reluctantly attending Muldspoon's Militantly Motivated Academy, when his father (like Dickens') is sent to debtor's prison. His mother is a layabout who does nothing but complain of her husband's fecklessness, and his sister's sole concern is how this family crisis impacts her marital prospects. It's left to John to unravel a mystery involving a military invention that his father, a naval clerk, has information about and a web of foreign spies willing to pay for specifics. John is a bit too good to be true: although he's horrified to uncover his father's various deceits, he refuses to listen to his estranged, rich great-great-Aunt Euphemia bad-mouth the man ("Your shame speaks well of you," she says, misunderstanding him). Though idealized, John is also thoroughly empathetic, a child with hefty concerns thrust upon him, unsure of who he can trust. At least one character's motivation remains murky at the end, but the twisty plot keeps the pages turning and the rich period detail-as well as debut illustrator's Raude's delicate pen and ink illustrations scattered throughout-places readers right in Victorian England at a time when the serialization of David Copperfield had London abuzz. Ages 11-14. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Horn Book Review
(Middle School) Avi sets this Dickensian adventure in 1849 (when avid readers were first discovering David Copperfield). Narrator John Huffam is fourteen. His father is in debtors' prison with no hope of paying his gambling debts; wealthy Great-aunt Euphemia won't help. Huffam pure worked in Naval Ordinance -- which of the many colorful, mysterious characters seeks the precious military document he penned? These characters include an Irish nationalist, a Frenchman, a police inspector, an oddly friendly bailiff, John's militaristic schoolmaster -- the range of suspects suggests that events hinge more on political intrigue than on domestic misfortune. Except for our honest narrator, no one is quite what he seems, not even John's friend and collaborator Sary the Sneak -- ""a street sweeper o' bits o' information."" Dozens of atmospheric crosshatched drawings plus plenty of Dickensian imagery (""he dressed like a jack-a-dandy, with a brushed top hat that seemed to be held up by his ears [rather like] a small candle wearing its own snuffer""; ""melancholy gravestones...like exhausted sentinels, guarding a past that had already fled"") vividly evoke Dickens's London. Just the thing to read aloud, if your audience doesn't grab it first. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Avi, a fan of Charles Dickens, uses some of the circumstances of the writer's early life as a basis for a story set in the wretched world that was midcentury Victorian England. When 14-year-old John Huffman begins his story, things are dire. His father, an amateur actor and employee of the Naval Ordinance Office, is about to be carted off to prison for his gambling debts (just as Dickens' father was sent to debtors' prison). But are the debts the real reason for the imprisonment? John comes to believe more is going on, and he delves deeply into the mystery, where neither things nor people are quite what they seem, and the security of the nation could be at stake. The book is at its best when describing London--seedy, smelly, and a place where almost everybody is out to take advantage of someone else. Some of the lively characters follow in the full-bodied Dickens tradition, but others are truncated, and their motives are only cursorily explained. Slow patches occur, but the solid plot twists at the end are worth waiting for. --Ilene Cooper Copyright 2007 Booklist
School Library Journal Review
Gr 5-9-Avi returns to the 19th century in this novel of traitors, spies, family, and even love. John Huffam's father works as a clerk in the Naval Ordinance Office in London, and he is suspected of trying to sell a secret about a new weapon to pay his gambling debts. When he is arrested as a debtor, 14-year-old John, the sensible member of his family, must seek financial help from a distant relative, leave school for employment, and unravel the mystery surrounding his father and try to find out why so many people are spying on the Huffams. The novel perfectly captures John's passage from naive boy to disillusioned young man, as his world crumbles when he sees his father more clearly. He develops an unlikely friend, partner, and even romance with the slippery orphan, Sary the Sneak, whose motives sometimes seem as suspect as the many other characters involved. This is a Victorian tale charmingly told in Victorian fashion. Avi's love of the period is evident in how vividly, and without romanticizing, he brings London, teeming with eccentric characters, smells, and sounds, to life. Indeed, the city becomes a central character. With plenty of period detail, this action-packed narrative of twists, turns, and treachery is another winner from a master craftsman.-Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Returning to the mid-19th century for both a London setting and the narrative's many-chaptered, confessional style, Avi spins a Dickensian web of blackmail, treason and spycraft. John Huffam, 14, rushes from school to find that, due to Father's gambling debts, the family's been evicted and sent to a "sponging house," the last stop before debtors' prison. John's mother and sister flail in a miasma of self-absorption, while Father, a low-level bureaucrat and amateur actor, would as soon lie as breathe. It falls to John to uncover the truth and secure Father's release, but the boy's soon swept into a world teeming with detectives, spies and colorful eccentrics. Sary's a street urchin who trades information for pennies; Mr. Tuckham's a bailiff who revels in England's "old fashioned" (and relentlessly punitive) legal system. While John's narration is refreshingly faithful to period literary conventions, his too-guileless candor with Sary the Sneak (while a crucial plot point) strains credulity. There's a pleasingly twist-filled resolution, though, with enough residual intrigue for a sequel. (Historical fiction. 10-14) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Excerpts
Excerpts
Prologue "Don't speak!" "But -- " "I'm warning you, don't speak! Yer life may depend upon it!" Midnight on the River Thames: A rowboat in which two men sit. Water stinking of dead fish, sewage, and brackish sea. Fog so clotted with coal dust that the men, though a few feet apart, cannot see each other, no more than they can see the stars in heaven or the gas lamps of London less than a quarter of a mile away. A paddle wheeler passes by. The churning water causes the rowboat to dip and bob. The first speaker rests on his oars. But once the wheeler is gone, he leans over his oars and whispers, "River police." "How do you know?" "It's my job to know, ain't it?" His voice is low and husky. "Do they know we're here?" "Maybe." "How could they?" "Them Metropolitan Police 'ave detectives now." "A dumb lot they are, I suppose." "Think so? Then 'ere's some advice: Keep away from Chief Inspector Ratchet. You never know when 'e'll show up. All right, then, 'ow are things back where you come from?" "Couldn't be worse." "And you're 'ere to even things up, right?" "We're going to defend ourselves, that's all." "So you called on me for 'elp, did you?" "Right." "'Ow you get my name?" "A girl said you'd help me." "Then she done 'er job fine. Now listen 'ard. I'm about to provide that 'elp you want. Then I'll get you back on shore quick as winks." "Why did you bring me out here?" "You paid me for information. And you're brand-new 'ere, ain't you? People won't know you. But me, I've been round this city some. So let me tell you, London 'as more eyes and ears than any city. If them Peelers see you with me, it's over. Lot safer out 'ere on the river." "What about that police boat?" "Just 'ope it's a coincidence." "All right. Go on. I'm listening. What's your information?" "It's this: There's this clerk, Wesley John Louis 'Uffam." "Huffam?" "If you like." "Why, I know about him!" "Do you? Who told you?" "That's my business. Go on." "If you know 'im, I guess you also know 'e works in the Naval Ordinance Office. 'E's seen the wery plans you want. And 'e's more than seen 'em. 'E's copied 'em." "For whom?" "Who do you think? The Royal Navy. 'Ere's the point: There's reason to think you can get the information from 'im." "Is he willing?" "That's the word. The man's either a fool or too clever by 'alf. But 'e's surely got what you're looking for -- in 'is 'ead. The best military invention in a 'undred years. Changes everything. Better yet, 'e's let word slide that 'e's willing to sell it to the 'ighest bidder. Why? Cause 'e needs money. Needs it bad. All right, then: Apply the right squeeze and you should 'ave no trouble getting what you want out of 'im. 'E's an easy mark." "How much time do I have?" "What's it now, August? I'd say you got till November." "I have someone close to the man." "Who?" "You have your business, I have mine." "You talk like a real spy." "If you're asking if I'm willing to take risks? Well, I am." "A real gambler, ain't you?" "A man has to survive someway, don't he?" "Fine, but from this point on," says the rower, "you're on yer own. Understand? I don't want to see yer face, and I don't want you to see mine." "Don't worry. The bloody fog is so thick, I can't see anything." "Good." "Anything else?" "Just this: From the way this 'ere 'Uffam put out 'is word, I'll bet there's others trying to get what you want. You're not likely to be the only one in the game." "Who else?" "The usual mob. The French. The Russians, per'aps. Maybe the Prussians, Turks, or Spanish. Could be Americans for that matter. Take yer pick." "No idea which?" "It could be all. Or some. Or none. Best be on yer guard. Now I'll take you back to the riverbank. No more talk." "One more question." "Go on." "What's your interest?" The rower leans forward and, guided by the voice, manages to tap on the other man's chest as if to punch a mark on it. "I can 'ave my own business too, can't I?" "Suit yourself," says the passenger, pushing the hand away with a walking stick. The rower leans back and begins to propel the rowboat with powerful strokes. All is quiet save for the splash of oars. "Fog lifting," he says, shifting his head so that his oilskin cloak covers him up to the eyes. "Where are we?" The rower peers through the murk. "There's the Tower of London. You can just make out Traitors' Gate." "I'd rather not land there," mutters the other. "Fitting...in its way." "If that's a joke, I don't like it. Just get me on shore." The little boat scrapes the riverbank where a narrow city street -- Cousin Lane -- runs down to the water. The passenger clambers out. "Mind the muck!" "I'm fine." "Good luck." "I assure you," the man calls back as he vanishes into the fog, "luck will have nothing to do with it." "Maybe," murmurs the oarsman as he pushes back into the foggy river, "just maybe I should 'ave taken 'im straight to Traitors' Gate. Might 'ave saved time. Well, I guess I'll find out soon enough." He rows right to Old Swan's Pier, where the police paddle wheeler is waiting for him. "All right, then," he announces as he climbs aboard. "Our pretty little fishing expedition 'as commenced. By November we'll see what our net brings in." Among those who hear him is a girl. She puts a dirty hand over her mouth and does a little jig of delight to keep from laughing out loud. Excerpted from The Traitors' Gate by Avi All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.