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Young Adult Fiction Law & Crime

The Prisoner of Snowflake Falls

by (author) John Lekich

Publisher
Orca Book Publishers
Initial publish date
Apr 2012
Category
Law & Crime, Friendship, General (see also headings under Social Themes)
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781554699803
    Publish Date
    Apr 2012
    List Price
    $16.99
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781554699780
    Publish Date
    Apr 2012
    List Price
    $12.95

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Where to buy it

Recommended Age, Grade, and Reading Levels

  • Age: 12
  • Grade: 8 to 12
  • Reading age: 12

Description

Fifteen-year-old Henry Holloway isn't immoral, he's just hungry. His mother died when he was nine, leaving him to be raised by his Uncle Andy and his friends, all amiable small-time crooks. When Uncle Andy is sent to prison, Henry takes up residence in an abandoned tree house in order to escape the notice of Social Services. His mission? To survive on his own while preserving his cherished independence. Fortunately, Henry possesses all the skills it takes to be a successful house burglar.

Henry is an unusually resourceful and considerate burglar—often tidying up the places he robs—until he's caught. The terms of his probation? He must live with the Wingates, a strange family in a small town called Snowflake Falls.

Henry is just getting used to his temporary family when the newly liberated Uncle Andy and his criminal friends draw him into a plan to rob the citizens of Snowflake Falls. Will Henry be loyal to his uncle or will he break with the past and do the right thing?

About the author

John Lekich is a Vancouver-based author and freelance writer whose work has appeared in such publications as Reader's Digest, the Los Angeles Times and the Hollywood Reporter. A former West Coast arts correspondent for The Globe and Mail, he is the recipient of ten regional and national magazine awards. His favorite interview subjects include Audrey Hepburn, George Plimpton, Garrison Keillor and silent screen star Lillian Gish.
John is the author of two previous young adult novels, The Losers' Club and King of the Lost and Found. He is currently working on a new novel.

John Lekich's profile page

Awards

  • Short-listed, Stellar Award nominee
  • Nominated, Stellar Book Award
  • Commended, TriState YA Review Group Book of Note
  • Short-listed, BC and Yukon Book Prizes - Sheila A. Egoff Children's Literature Prize
  • Short-listed, Manitoba Young Reader's Choice Award nominee
  • Commended, TriState Young Adult Book Review Committee Book of Note
  • Nominated, Manitoba Young Readers' Choice Award (MYRCA)
  • Short-listed, Sheila A. Egoff Children’s Literature Prize nominee
  • Commended, CCBC Best Books starred selection
  • Commended, CCBC Best Books for Kids & Teens, starred selection

Excerpt: The Prisoner of Snowflake Falls (by (author) John Lekich)

Ever since I was a kid, being even a little bit hungry has given me bad dreams. The past couple of nights I've dreamed that a police car was taking me away in handcuffs. Both times I've woken up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat. This is so upsetting that I have to calm myself down by closing my eyes and visualizing the inner workings of various locks. This is a talent I learned during my advance training at the Walter Gurski School of Lock Picking. I find it very soothing during times of stress.

Editorial Reviews

"It is almost impossible not to like Henry Hollaway...Lekich has provided Henry with an engaging story and a powerful voice. He has created a novel that has both a retro feel and contemporary issues...Lekich encourages us to think we can predict what will happen and then always surprises us. While we are left unsure of Henry's next steps, we feel confident that he has a bright and happy future. Recommended."

CM Magazine

"This amiable tale of misadventure is a sweet, entertaining read with a good moral compass. The author has a delightful sense of playfulness and imagery, and provides many feel-good moments. The tone is light and the story sprinkled with all the usual teen angst plus that which is felt by a surprisingly moral fifteen-year-old thief."

VOYA

"A book rich with simple complexities and deadpan one-liners that brilliant comics will wish they had written...This is fiction that I wish were targeted to adults. Not because the book might tempt youth to glamorize crime or emulate Holloway, but because it takes certain experience and perspective to fully appreciate its deeper meaning and elegant writing. Lekich is a writer's writer. No question....The Prisoner of Snowflake Falls reverberates with the genuine, essential stuff. Stuff that (unlike all that's mean and wrong with the world) never makes the evening news. Profound meaning can be found in the smallest gesture. Echoes of the ages resound in the philosophical, social and moral ideas...Every character is flawed but inherently noble."

www.thewayofwords.com

"What a voice! With wit and a wondrous imagination John Lekich has crafted a character I will long remember and admire...As readers we meet an incredibly diverse slate of characters, unconventional and wise, empathetic to Henry's plight and gullibly welcoming to all visitors. Henry comes in contact with people who have an impact on the decisions he makes, and he is averse to hurting them. You don't want to miss meeting any of them."

Sal's Fiction Addiction blog

"The Wingate family and the whole town of Snowflake Falls is as refreshingly quirky as the band of criminals Henry grew up with and helps keep the tone light...[Readers] will be thoroughly charmed by Henry's antics and the wacky cast of characters that populate Snowflake falls."

Resource Links

"An excellent read—funny, witty, and perfect for the young adult group...Recommended for any YA or high school library."

Jane on Books blog

"Full of humour, compassion, love and commitment to family. The characters are charming, funny and surprisingly complicated."

Nikki Tate-Stratton, CBC All Points West

"Lekich's characters in The Prisoner of Snowflake Falls are the treasures that readers look for in great fiction. They are unique and true to themselves, good or bad, and evolving."

CanLit for Little Canadians blog

"Dry humour, a slightly insane imagination and a highly personable hero make Lekich's new novel wholly refreshing...This crime comedy is made all the more entertaining by its cast of eccentric characters, but none is more winsome than Henry—who steals cars only so he can organize his thoughts; tidies the houses of those he robs; and brings a clever, comical bemusement to his own story. Delightful."

The Toronto Star

"Lekich has created a character worth caring about...For those who enjoy quirky characters and stories of redemption, this is a good bet."

Booklist Online

"With his impeccable writing skills, author John Lekich has created an antagonist who is also a protagonist. Despite his foibles, Henry is both comical and pitiful, lovable and enviable...There is not a 'cutsie' ending to this story. It is authentic, unpredictable and humorous. Young readers as well as old will enjoy Henry's character, the Wingates' antics, Lekich's descriptions of small-town life, and the overall message of the book."

Tri State YA Book Review Committee

"Henry is a likeable character, and readers will root for him to redeem himself."

NJ Youth Services

"There are plenty of amusing parts and the language...is playful and Runyon-esque...This is a charming, funny coming-of-age story with terrific writing, characters to root for, and a completely satisfying ending to a silly caper."

School Library Journal

"Sweet-tempered and hugely enjoyable."

Vancouver Public Library, Staff Fiction Picks

"Henry has a gift for understated humour and the plot is full of surprising twists and turns, sometimes solemn and sometimes very funny. Even the quirky characters—and the Wingates, in particular, are extraordinarily odd—have a refreshingly different quirkiness to them. Readers will be engaged by Henry's predicaments, his honesty (when crime isn't involved) and his unique moral code. They will certainly laugh and they might even pick up the odd security tip."

Canadian Children's Book News

Librarian Reviews

The Prisoner of Snowflake Falls

Orphan Henry Holloway is forced to survive on his own after his uncle was thrown in jail for theft. Henry might also be a thief, but he is a considerate one who often cleans a home before robbing it and does not steal sentimental items. When Henry is finally caught in the act, he is sent to Snowflake Falls to live with the Wingates. There, he is given a second chance to earn the right to live a lawful life.

Lekich is the author of two other young adult novels, The King of the Lost and Found and The Losers’ Club which was a finalist for the Governor General’s Award, YALSA Best Books for Young Adults and BC Book Prize’s Sheila A. Egoff Award.

Source: The Association of Book Publishers of BC. BC Books for BC Schools. 2012-2013.

The Prisoner of Snowflake Falls

Expert at lockpicking, hotwiring cars and observing human behaviour, Henry Holloway is a considerate 15-year-old burglar. He steals what he needs to survive, he avoids taking anything of sentimental value and he often tidies up the houses of people he steals from. He also tries to keep his Uncle Andy (his legal but temporarily incarcerated guardian) from learning about his current life — because they both know that Henry’s late mother wanted him to avoid a life of crime.

When Henry gets caught, the judge sends him to live in the small community of Snowflake Falls on Vancouver Island through a program called Second Chances. The inhabitants of Snowflake Falls — especially the Wingate family with whom Henry lives — drive him crazy. Forced to work two jobs as well as attend school and “volunteer” to read to an elderly hermit, he seems to be perpetually in humiliating and/or exasperating circumstances. Nevertheless, the town exerts an odd pull on Henry. When his uncle and two accomplices arrive in Snowflake Falls with a scheme to rob the inhabitants, Henry is forced to choose his alliances — even as the town starts to exert its own pull on Uncle Andy and his associates.

This reviewer has been a big fan of the work of author John Lekich since 2002 when his first book, The Losers’ Club, appeared. The Prisoner of Snowflake Falls lives up to expectations and proves what Lekich, in his acknowledgements, refers to as “the comic potential of larceny.” Henry has a gift for understated humour, and the plot is full of surprising twists and turns, sometimes solemn and sometimes very funny. Even the quirky characters — and the Wingates, in particular, are extraordinarily odd — have a refreshingly different quirkiness to them.

Readers will be engaged by Henry’s predicaments, his honesty (when crime isn’t involved) and his unique moral code. They will certainly laugh and they might even pick up the odd security tip.

Source: The Canadian Children's Bookcentre. Spring 2012. Volume 35 No. 2.

The Prisoner of Snowflake Falls

Henry Holloway is a burglar — resourceful and considerate — but a burglar nonetheless. When Henry’s uncle and guardian is imprisoned, Henry takes up residence in a tree house and tries to survive on his own. But one night he is caught in the midst of a burglary and is sent to a strange little town with even stranger residents and the chance to rewrite his moral code.

Source: The Canadian Children’s Book Centre. Best Books for Kids & Teens. Spring, 2012.

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