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The Grave

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Thirteen-year-old Tom Mullen has spent his entire life in foster homes. One night, while visiting a recently discovered mass grave at the local cemetery, he falls through a hole in time and finds himself in 1847 Ireland. Taken in by the first caring family he has ever known, Tom must find a way to help them survive the famine and disease that grips their country.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Foster child Tom Mullen explores the outskirts of a mass grave discovered in the local school yard. He is then pulled through space and time to arrive at an Irish village in 1847 just in time to save his ancestor. Amid famine and disease Tom finds a family. As he leaps back and forth in time, Tom must decide where he truly belongs. Heneghan's work makes the horror of the Irish Potato Famine come alive. Gerald Doyle's voice and varied accents add to the flavor of the novel. His reading will keep listeners rooting for Tom. As an added bonus, the ending has a lovely, unforgettable twist. J.M.P. (c) AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 2, 2000
      This eerie time-travel tale revolves around the excavation of a mass grave in Liverpool, England. Thirteen-year-old narrator Tom, a mistreated foster child, investigates an abandoned construction site and falls into a hole lined with decaying coffins and scattered bones. From here, he is magically transported to 1847 Ireland just in time to save the life of Tully Monaghan, an impoverished boy who could pass for Tom's identical twin. Imaginations will spin as readers speculate about the purpose of Tom's mission and his connection to a lookalike. Tom shuffles between past and present, helping the Monaghans survive the potato blight and returning to present-day slow-witted Brian, a foster brother in need of his help. Heneghan (Wish Me Luck; Torn Away) skillfully conveys a tug-of-war between Tom's allegiances and allows readers to empathize with the hero's subtle shifts: initially the Irish setting is more compellingly drawn because Tom feels a sense of belonging there, but as the protagonist recognizes that he also has a place in his own world, the strengths of his present-day situation become more apparent. The author relies heavily on coincidence to construct a neat, happy (and highly improbable) resolution, but many readers will be willing to suspend disbelief to welcome a brighter future for a hero who has experienced more than his share of darkness. Ages 12-up.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 15, 2002
      PW
      called this novel about a 13-year-old mistreated foster child who investigates an abandoned construction site, falls into a hole lined with decaying coffins and is magically transported to 1847 Ireland, an "eerie time travel tale." Ages 12-up.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:810
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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