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Subject
- Community service (Punishment)--Juvenile fiction
- Criminal investigation--Juvenile fiction
- Friendship--Juvenile fiction
- Interpersonal relations--Juvenile fiction
- Missing children--Juvenile fiction
- Missing persons--Juvenile fiction
- Self-actualization (Psychology)--Juvenile fiction
- Teenagers--Juvenile fiction
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Availability
Availability Label | Location | Shelfmark | Availability | Reservations |
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Central Branch | Teen Fiction Bever | Copies Available |
0 | |
Sydenham Branch | Teen Fiction Bever | Copies Available |
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Summary & Details
Full Record Details Table
Title Statement | The Nothing Club / Cathy Beveridge. |
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Author | Beveridge, Cathy |
Publication | Vancouver, BC: Ronsdale Press,[2025]©2025 |
Extent of Item | 195 pages ; |
ISBN | 9781553807285 (trade paperback) |
Other Number | pr07805632 |
Audience & Ratings | 012+. |
Summary | "Four delinquent teens are inadvertently pulled into a criminal investigation that challenges their deepest values and misconceptions. Poor choices land four outlier teens in summer-time mandatory community service. Deemed good-for-nothing by those who judge, they label themselves The Nothing Club. After inadvertently setting a grass fire with fireworks, Grady is the first to arrive for community service, followed by the walled and tattooed Margaret, the genius Nikki, and the animal-loving Free Throw, who subsequently meet the I-wish-I-were-invisible concession girl, Catherine. The teens are supervised by the philanthropic and diabetic widow Mrs. Stafford and her maintenance man, Reg - a non-judgmental mentor with an unconventional approach to rehabilitation. But when a small child and Catherine go missing Reg is the prime suspect. The teens are determined to exonerate him and find their missing friend but their well-meaning efforts lead them further into the activities similar to those that landed them in community service in the first place. Fast-paced and energetic, the novel is told from 15-year-old Grady's humorous, often self-deprecating and sometimes-insightful, perspective. The teens' experiences pave the way for their personal transformations and unlikely, yet profound, friendships. The novel explores the relationship between trauma and self-forgiveness and the multiple ways that people engage in faith and spirituality."-- |
Subjects & Genres | |
By Topic | Community service (Punishment)--Juvenile fiction |
Criminal investigation--Juvenile fiction | |
Friendship--Juvenile fiction | |
Interpersonal relations--Juvenile fiction | |
Missing children--Juvenile fiction | |
Missing persons--Juvenile fiction | |
Self-actualization (Psychology)--Juvenile fiction | |
Teenagers--Juvenile fiction | |
By Genre | Young adult fiction |
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