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Crispin : the cross of lead
    Avi, 1937-
Publisher: Hyperion Books For Children,
Pub date: 2002.
Pages: 262 p. ;
ISBN: 0786808284
Item info: 23 copies checked in at Warren - Arthur Miller Branch, Chesterfield Township Library, Center Line Public Library, Eastpointe Memorial Library, Fraser Public Library, Lenox Township Library, Lois Wagner Memorial Library, Mt. Clemens Public Library, MacDonald Public Library, Romeo Graubner Library, Roseville Public Library, Shelby Township Library, St. Clair Shores Public Library, Sterling Heights Public Library, Utica Public Library, Warren - Dorothy Busch Branch, and Warren - Civic Center Branch.
Holdings
Warren - Arthur Miller Branch Copies Material Location
YA FIC AVI 2 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Chesterfield Township Library Copies Material Location
YA FIC AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Teen Area
Center Line Public Library Copies Material Location
YA AVI 2 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Eastpointe Memorial Library Copies Material Location
Y FIC A 1 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
Fraser Public Library Copies Material Location
YA FIC AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Lenox Township Library Copies Material Location
YA AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Lois Wagner Memorial Library Copies Material Location
YA AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
MacDonald Public Library Copies Material Location
JFIC AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Mt. Clemens Public Library Copies Material Location
TA AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Teen Area
Romeo Graubner Library Copies Material Location
J FIC AVI 2 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Romeo Kezar Branch Library Copies Material Location
Y FIC AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Material has been checked out
Roseville Public Library Copies Material Location
YA FIC AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
Shelby Township Library Copies Material Location
Y FIC AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
St. Clair Shores Public Library Copies Material Location
Y A 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Sterling Heights Public Library Copies Material Location
JFIC AVI 1 Reference Youth Services
  1 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
YA FIC AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Utica Public Library Copies Material Location
J A 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Warren - Civic Center Branch Copies Material Location
JFIC AVI 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Warren - Dorothy Busch Branch Copies Material Location
YA FIC AVI 2 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Summary
H "Avi's plot is engineered for maximum thrills, with twists, turns, and treachery aplenty. . . . A page-turner to delight Avi's fans, it will leave readers hoping for a sequel."-Publishers Weekly (starred review) H " . . . [T]he book is a page-turner from beginning to end . . . [A] meticulously crafted story, full of adventure, mystery, and action." -School Library Journal (starred review) "Historical fiction at its finest."-VOYA Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Publishers Weekly Review
Set in 14th-century England, Avi's (The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle) 50th book begins with a funeral, that of a village outcast whose past is shrouded in mystery and whose adolescent son is known only as "Asta's son." Mired in grief for his mother, the boy learns his given name, Crispin, from the village priest, although his presumably dead father's identity remains obscure. The words etched on his mother's treasured lead cross may provide some clue, but the priest is murdered before he can tell the illiterate lad what they say. Worse, Crispin is fingered for the murder by the manor steward, who declares him a "wolf's head" wanted dead or alive, preferably dead. Crispin flees, and falls in with a traveling juggler. "I have no name," Crispin tells Bear, whose rough manners and appearance mask a tender heart. "No home, no kin, no place in this world." How the boy learns his true identity (he's the bastard son of the lord of the manor) and finds his place in the world makes for a rattling fine yarn. Avi's plot is engineered for maximum thrills, with twists, turns and treachery aplenty, but it's the compellingly drawn relationship between Crispin and Bear that provides the heart of this story. A page turner to delight Avi's fans, it will leave readers hoping for a sequel. Ages 8-12. (June) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
School Library Journal Review
Gr 6-9-As with Karen Cushman's The Midwife's Apprentice (Clarion, 1995), the power of a name is apparent in this novel set in 14th-century England. "Asta's son" is all the destitute, illiterate hero has ever been called, but after his mother dies, he learns that his given name is Crispin, and that he is in mortal danger. The local priest is murdered before he can tell him more about his background, and Aycliffe, the evil village steward for Lord Furnival, declares that the boy is a "wolf's head," less than human, and that he should be killed on sight. On the run, with nothing to sustain him but his faith in God, Crispin meets "Bear," a roving entertainer who has ties to an underground movement to improve living conditions for the common people. They make their way to Great Wexley, where Bear has clandestine meetings and Crispin hopes to escape from Aycliffe and his soldiers, who stalk him at every turn. Suspense heightens when the boy learns that the recently deceased Lord Furnival was his father and that Aycliffe is dead set on preventing him from claiming his title. To trap his prey, the villain captures Bear, and Crispin risks his life to save him. Avi has done an excellent job of integrating background and historical information, of pacing the plot so that the book is a page-turner from beginning to end, and of creating characters for whom readers will have great empathy. The result is a meticulously crafted story, full of adventure, mystery, and action.-Cheri Estes, Detroit Country Day Middle School, Beverly Hills, MI Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
Booklist Review
Gr. 5^-9. In his fiftieth book, (see interview on p.1609) Avi sets his story in fourteenth-century England and introduces some of his most unforgettable characters--a 13-year-old orphan, seemingly without a name, and a huge, odd juggler named Bear. At first, the boy is known as Asta's Son, but when his mother dies, he learns from a priest that his name is really Crispin. He also quickly comes to realize that he is in grave trouble. John Acliffe, the steward of the manor, reveals himself to be Crispin's mortal enemy and declares the boy a "wolf's-head," which means he is anyone's prey. Clutching his only possession, a lead cross, Crispin flees his village into a vast new world of opportunity--and terror. At his lowest ebb, Crispin meets Bear and reluctantly swears an oath to be his servant. Yet Bear becomes much more than a master--he's Crispin's teacher, protector, and liberator. Avi builds an impressive backdrop for his arresting characters: a tense medieval world in which hostility against the landowners and their cruelties is increasing. There's also other nail-biting tension in the story that builds to a gripping, somewhat confusing ending, which finds Crispin, once weak, now strong. Readers may not understand every nuance of the political machinations that propel the story, but they will feel the shifting winds of change beginning to blow through a feudal society. --Ilene Cooper From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.

Childrens Literature Comprehensive Database Review

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Personal Author Avi, 1937-
Title Crispin : the cross of lead / Avi.
Edition 1st ed.
Publication info New York : Hyperion Books For Children, 2002.
Physical descrip 262 p. ; 24 cm.
Summary Falsely accused of theft and murder, an orphaned peasant boy in fourteenth-century England flees his village and meets a larger-than-life juggler who holds a dangerous secret.
Subject term Identity (Philosophical concept)--Juvenile fiction.
Subject term Orphans--Juvenile fiction.
Subject term Middle Ages--Juvenile fiction.
Geographic term Great Britain--History--Edward III, 1327-1377--Juvenile fiction.
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