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Young Adult Fiction Time Travel

Secret of Light

An Eagle Glen Trilogy Book

by (author) kc dyer

Publisher
Dundurn Press
Initial publish date
Nov 2003
Category
Time Travel, Mysteries & Detective Stories, Europe
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781770701601
    Publish Date
    Nov 2003
    List Price
    $12.99
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781554886029
    Publish Date
    Nov 2003
    List Price
    $8.99

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Description

Short-listed for the 2004 Chocolate Lily Book Award
Darrell Connor is back for another term at Eagle Glen, but is shocked to find that along with her friends Brodie and Kate, her nemesis, Conrad Kennedy, has enrolled at the school.
The memory of her recent visit to medieval Scotland is still fresh, and when Darrell and her dog, Delaney, investigate an abandoned lighthouse, they discover another route into the past. Lost in the magical beauty of Renaissance Italy, Darrell meets a young artist with fiery ambition named Leonardo Da Vinci.
Does Leonardo hold the key to resolving the tragedy of her own past? Ignoring the advice of a kindly stranger, Darrell embarks on a desperate journey to find the answers to her own fears, unaware of the price she and her friends will pay for dancing with time.

About the author

kc dyer is a freelance writer. She lives with her menagerie of children and animals in Lions Bay, British Columbia, where she produces the local newspaper. She is the author of the acclaimed Eagle Glen novels, featuring Darrell O`Connor and her friends. Find out more at www.kcdyer.com.

kc dyer's profile page

Awards

  • Short-listed, Chocolate Lily Book Award

Editorial Reviews

Cole Fennety has his eye on a very nice bike, a Kona Hardtail Stuff, to be precise. His parents really can't afford to buy it, and he knows that the only way that he'll own it is to find a job. Problem is, at 14 years of age, the prospects are somewhat limited. And, until he passes Sam's Shop, a combination hardware store and small engine repair shop owned by the notoriously crusty Sam Kerrigan, a paper route seems like the only option. Cole's job "interview" is quite unusual, but, after finding keel sticks, chain saws, and files, he finds, to his surprise that he is hired. "Working for old Sam Kerrigan wasn't going to be a happy experience, that was for sure," but Cole can make it work for a summer, if it means that he can earn enough to buy that Kona. Sam's Light is the chronicle of the summer that Cole spends in the hardware store with Sam. There's also life at home with a mom for whom television soaps seem more important than "real" life, Cole's annoying younger sister, a father with whom he has a remarkably good relationship, Rhonda Walker, a classmate who becomes his girlfriend, and adventures with Wayne, his best friend. Impulsive, manipulative, and at times, genuinely thoughtless, Wayne is a total jerk, although Cole can't help admiring his fearlessness. Truth to tell, as a reader, I loathed Wayne, and by the time the story ends, Cole is close to feeling the same way about him. And, much of that is due to the changes that take place as Cole spends time with Sam, who we learn is suffering from terminal cancer, and who, turns out to be one of those men that Grandpa describes as "good . . . and fair." Sam knows that time is running out for him, and he plans to retire at the end of summer. But, the retirement is from more than work, and, when Sam confides to Cole that he plans to choose the time to end his life, Cole makes the decision that "Sam Kerrigan wasn't going to die alone." Not many 14-year-olds could make that decision, but Cole becomes quite another person by the time Sam leaves this world. Cole's choice is an extraordinary one, but sometimes, people are given the opportunity to make such choices, and they are changed forever. Cole certainly is. I enjoyed Sam's Light in a way that I hadn't expected. In her "Acknowledgments," Valerie Sherrard, the author of Kate and the "Shelby Belgarden" mysteries, attests to the challenges of writing in the voice of a teenage boy, and, at first, I found Cole to be wise beyond his years, and to be honest, quite unlike most 14-year-old boys of my acquaintance. Nevertheless, Cole's voice became stronger and more credible as the story developed. But, it's not enough for me to enjoy Sam's Light; it has to appeal to Cole's contemporaries. And, I think that it will. It's not for the guy who wants an action story - really, a summer spent in a rural hardware story is no competition for a Tom Clancy-style thriller. But, I think that there are young men who will enjoy Cole's story, and I know that young women will, too. Highly Recommended. -Joanne Peters is a teacher-librarian at Kelvin High School in Winnipeg, MB.

Hints near the conclusion of the story suggest that the third book in Dyer's trilogy will involve the Reformation and Inquisition. Readers will be waiting for it.

Prairie Fire Review of Books

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