Young Adult Fiction Sexual Abuse)
A Troublesome Boy
- Publisher
- Groundwood Books Ltd
- Initial publish date
- May 2012
- Category
- Sexual Abuse), Sexual Abuse, Suicide
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9781554981540
- Publish Date
- May 2012
- List Price
- $16.95
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781554981557
- Publish Date
- May 2012
- List Price
- $9.95
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Where to buy it
Out of print
This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.
Recommended Age, Grade, and Reading Levels
- Age: 0
- Grade: p to 12
- Reading age: 0
Description
A Kirkus Reviews Best Book About the Past, and selected as an Honor Book by the Society of School Librarians International
Teddy can't believe how fast his life has changed in just two years. When he was twelve, his father took off, and then his mother married Henry, a man Teddy despises. But Teddy has no control over his life, and adults make all the decisions, especially in 1959. Henry decides that Teddy should be sent to St. Ignatius Academy for Boys, an isolated boarding school run by the Catholic church.
St. Iggy's, Teddy learns, is a cold, unforgiving place -- something between a juvenile detention center and reform school. The other boys are mostly a cast of misfits and eccentrics, but Teddy quickly becomes best friends with Cooper, a wise-cracking, Wordsworth-loving kid with a history of neglect. Despite the priests' ruthless efforts to crack down on the slightest hint of defiance or attitude, the boys get by for a while on their wits, humor and dreams of escape. But the beatings, humiliation and hours spent in the school's infamous "time-out" rooms, and the institutionalized system of power and abuse that protects the priests' authority, eventually take their toll, especially on the increasingly fragile Cooper.
Then one of the new priests, Father Prince, starts to summon Cooper to his room at night, and Teddy watches helplessly as his friend withdraws into his own private nightmare, even as Prince targets Teddy himself as his next victim.
Teddy and Cooper's only reprieve comes on Saturdays, when the school janitor, Rozey, takes the boys to his run-down farmhouse outside of town, the only place where the boys can feel normal -- fishing, playing cribbage, watching the bears at the local dump. But even this can't stop Cooper's downward spiral and eventual suicide. And just when Teddy thinks something good might come out of his friend's tragedy, he finds himself dealing with the ultimate betrayal.
About the author
Growing up in Owen Sound, Paul Vasey endured a couple of stints at boarding school when he was nine, and again when he was fifteen: "My overwhelming feeling, especially at nine but also at fifteen, was of being betrayed; of being sent from a warm place to a cold one; of being sent away into the care of people who were only paid to care. A very lonely feeling." While he says he has never experienced the abuse suffered by many boarding-school boys, he did witness many scenes of cruelty and violence â” scenes that ultimately stirred his memories and fed this novel.
Eventually Paul got a job at the local daily, The Owen Sound Sun-Times, and from there went on to a stellar career in journalism â” print, television and radio. He has worked with The Windsor Star, Canadian Press, The Hamilton Spectator and the CBC (where he spent sixteen years as host of the morning show in Windsor, and two years hosting the morning show in Victoria, B.C.), and he has been awarded a Southam Fellowship for Journalists. He is the author of five novels for adults, as well as the nonfiction title, Kids in the Jail: Why Our Young Offenders Do the Things They Do (described by the Calgary Herald as "the most accurate and provocative demonstration yet of one of the most contentious issues of the decade"). As the board member of a mental-health treatment center for children and adolescents, he has seen how devastating abuse is for its victims, and how long-lasting its effects.
Paul lives in Windsor with his wife, Marilyn.
Awards
- Commended, Kirkus Reviews Best Books About the Past
- Commended, Society of School Librarians International Honor Book
Editorial Reviews
Vasey tackles serious subject matter with strong language and concise, intense writing.
SLJ
Paul Vasey writes his first novel with a chilling first person narrative, often laced with humor to help readers through the darkness, and with a sense of hopefulness
Sal's Fiction Addiction
A Troublesome Boy is full of tension, humour, disturbing characters as well as sympathetic ones, a commentary on Catholic schools and the abuse that pupils endured in the 1950s, and a beautifully constructed narrative voice.
CM Magazine
"...it is an amazingly powerful story in a concise, concentrated package that creates believable, unique characters that will own your heart (and break your heart) faster than you can turn the pages."
Abooksedarian.com
... this is a story that will not be forgotten. Troublesome Boy shows a realistic, yet fictional, aspect of life for teen boys in 1959 in a Catholic run boarding school.
VOYA
... Paul Vasey pens their story with a light craft, emphasizing the constructs of their emotions rather than detailed accounts of the abuse.
CanLit for LittleCanadians
Librarian Reviews
A Troublesome Boy
In 1959, Teddy is sent to a boarding school run by the Catholic Church and becomes friends with Cooper, a wise-cracking kid with a history of neglect. The beatings, humiliation and hours spent in the “time-out” rooms take their toll, but when Cooper begins to be summoned to Father Prince’s room at night, Teddy can only watch helplessly.Source: The Canadian Children’s Book Centre. Best Books for Kids & Teens. Spring, 2012.