Young Adult Fiction Apocalyptic & Post-apocalyptic
The Headmasters
- Publisher
- Shadowpaw Press
- Initial publish date
- Feb 2024
- Category
- Apocalyptic & Post-Apocalyptic, Dystopian
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781989398845
- Publish Date
- Feb 2024
- List Price
- $26.99
Add it to your shelf
Where to buy it
Recommended Age, Grade, and Reading Levels
- Age: 12 to 18
- Grade: 7 to 12
- Reading age: 11 to 13
Description
How do you learn from the past if there isn't one?
Sixty years ago, something awful happened. Something that killed everyone except the people at Blue Ring. Something that caused the Headmasters to appear. But Maple doesn't know what it was. Because talking about the past is forbidden.
Everyone at Blue Ring has a Headmaster. They sink their sinewy coils into your skull and control you, using your body for backbreaking toil and your mind to communicate with each other. When someone dies, their Headmaster transfers to someone new. But so do the dead person's memories, and if one of those memories surfaces in the new host's mind, their brain breaks. That's why talking about the past is forbidden.
Maple hates this world where the past can't exist and the future promises only more suffering. And she hates the Headmasters for making it that way. But she doesn't know how to fight them - until memories start to surface in her mind from someone who long ago came close to defeating the Headmasters.
But whose memories are they? Why aren't they harming her? And how can she use them to defeat the Headmasters? Maple has to find the answers herself, unable to tell anyone what she's experiencing or planning-not even Thorn, the young man she's falling in love with. Thorn, who has some forbidden secrets of his own . . .
About the author
MARK MORTON is also the author of four works of nonfiction: Cupboard Love: A Dictionary of Culinary Curiosities (nominated for a Julia Child Award); The End: Closing Words for a Millennium (winner of the Alexander Isbister Award for nonfiction); The Lover's Tongue: A Merry Romp Through the Language of Love and Sex (republished in the UK as Dirty Words), and Cooking with Shakespeare. He's also the author of more than 50 columns for Gastronomica: The Journal of Food and Culture (University of California Press) and has written and broadcast more than a hundred columns about language and culture for CBC Radio. Mark has a PhD in sixteenth-century literature from the University of Toronto and has taught at several universities in France and Canada. He currently works at the University of Waterloo. He and his wife, Melanie Cameron, (also an author) have four children, three dogs, one rabbit, and no time. The Headmasters is his first YA novel.
Editorial Reviews
"Mark Morton's The Headmasters is a brilliant science-fiction debut from one of Canada's best-loved nonfiction writers. This compelling YA novel is a spot-on updating of Robert A. Heinlein's classic The Puppet Masters for the new millennium, with intricate world-building, a great science-fiction puzzle, and - ironic for a novel about suppressed memories - a main character you'll never forget. I loved it." - Robert J. Sawyer, Hugo Award-winning author of The Downloaded
"A striking contribution to the young adult science fiction genre, blending elements of speculative fiction with an exploration of autonomy, identity, and the intricate dance between control and resistance . . . This novel stands as a modern allegory of societal control and individual freedom, echoing concerns that resonate deeply in our contemporary digital landscape."-St. Louis Literary Review
"A provocative and intelligent science fiction novel that challenges its readers to think about oppression and domination, what it means to truly resist, and what motivates one to fight against a tyrannical system even when the citizens don't know that they are being tyrannized." - LitPick(Five Star Book Review Award winner)
"Eminently readable and exciting . . . The Headmasters is a worthy companion to books such as Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale and John Wyndham's The Chrysalids . . . in contemplating humanity and freedom in a Canadian context."-Bill Rambo, The Winnipeg Free Press