Young Adult Fiction Multigenerational
Other Side
- Publisher
- Red Deer Press
- Initial publish date
- May 2020
- Category
- Multigenerational, Soccer, Mysteries & Detective Stories
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9780889956742
- Publish Date
- May 2020
- List Price
- $12.99
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Where to buy it
Recommended Age, Grade, and Reading Levels
- Age: 12 to 16
- Grade: 7 to 11
Description
Twelve-year-old Liam finds a dead body along the shore at his grandfather's cottage. He can't erase what he's seen and can't focus on anything else, not even the upcoming opportunity of a lifetime to try out for an elite soccer team. Liam believes there is more to the girl's story than her "accidental death" and decides to investigate.
When Liam visits his grandfather, living in palliative care, things go from bad to worse. As they watch Germany's 2014 World Cup soccer games together, his grandfather, a German World War II veteran, reveals stories about his past — stories a Jewish Canadian kid doesn't want to hear. Angry and overwhelmed, Liam is swept up in a history that may just help him solve the girl's death — and make sense of his own world again.
About the author
HEATHER CAMLOT is the author of the nonfiction What If Soldiers Fought with Pillows? and the Skipping Stones Honor Award novels The Other Side and Clutch, the latter of which was named among Kirkus’s Best Middle-Grade Historical Fiction. A journalist for more than 20 years, she has written, edited and translated for various publications, including Quill & Quire, Owl, TV Guide Canada and Style at Home. She lives in Toronto, Ontario.
Awards
- Commended, Skipping Stones Honor Awards
Editorial Reviews
"Because Heather Camlot gives her young adult audience a mystery story which has overtones of both family drama and historical novel, this book will have wide appeal. . . Murder and suspense, coping with trauma and death, understanding the relevance of history? this novel combines important themes and an interesting cast of characters in a well-written and thought-provoking story.
Highly Recommended"
"What might have been a simple whodunit becomes a powerful exploration of family secrets, trauma, and grief, enlivened by the exhilarating furor of soccer. Liam's sharp, ruminative narration fully immerses readers in his journey. School days and soccer games carry the same emotional intensity as visits to his grandfather or intrusive flashbacks to finding the dead girl in a painfully accurate depiction of post-traumatic stress. Strong family bonds create some of the novel's most moving scenes, as when Liam struggles to reconcile hatred for his grandfather's actions during the war with love for the person who taught him everything. Many characters, most of whom are White, are painstakingly sketched, with complex inner lives. However, Liam's Black friend Alessia is more wise mentor than fully rounded tween. Although the story explores the complexity of individual actions in relation to the Holocaust, Alessia praises Liam's present-day colorblindness, and his passivity in the face of overt racism is insufficiently explored.
Powerful if uneven."
Other titles by
Hanoukka
Hanukkah
Becoming Bionic and Other Ways Science Is Making Us Super
The Prisoner and the Writer
Secret Schools
True Stories of the Determination to Learn
I Can't Do What?
Strange Laws and Rules from Around the World
My Delicious Garden
The Other Side
What If Soldiers Fought with Pillows?
True Stories of Imagination and Courage