From Amazon
After yet another bullying, she escapes into a cozy old antique shop where Sophia, the proprietress, gives her the Maze, a small black box inlaid with an intricate silver design. Andrea soon discovers that the Maze is an intriguing means of escaping from Crystal and company. But then everything seems to go wrong. When the Six attack Andrea in the park, Crystal and her second-in-command Serena suddenly disappear. Andrea discovers that they've been swept into the world of the Maze and only she can rescue them.
In The Maze, Hughes inventively explores bullying from the perspectives of both bullies and victims through an engaging fantasy fiction that's full of surprises. It's a welcome addition to the exciting fictional worlds that Hughes has opened up to teens in more than 30 novels, including Stormwarning, The Keeper of the Isis Light, and Invitation to the Game. (Ages 12 and older) --Jeffrey Canton
Review
The protagonist, isolated from mainstream teenage life in Hughes' The Maze, is Andrea Austin whose odd clothing, dictated by her austere father, and her too obvious cleverness, make her a target for a group of girl bullies at her new high school. Already lonely and emotionally fragile in the aftermath of her parent's divorce, Andrea is adrift until she finds a mysterious box, with a maze-like design on its lid, in a strange curio store. The box proves to be the entry into another world controlled by the mind. When Andrea is swarmed by her tormentors, her fear and their anger trap the two, most dangerous ones, Crystal and Sabrina, in the world of the maze. At first, Andrea is relieved as the bullying stops, but soon she finds herself the focus of police questioning into the apparent disappearance of the two girls. She comes to realize that she must free them from the maze and the latter half of the book is given over to this, and to the changes which occur in Andrea as a result of her efforts and as she comes into her own.
The maze itself is controlled by the thoughts and feelings of those within in it, and this device works beautifully to allow Hughes to explore not only Andrea's feelings, but also to give insight into the mind of Crystal, showing what motivates her aggressive behaviour, without ever condoning it. The whole quest, with its surprises is engrossing, and cleverly reflects the events of the real world. Hughes' subtle writing falters only towards the dénouement, where she veers a little too much towards the facile. Andrea's problems are solved too neatly: She learns to stand up to her father, manages to establish contact with her mother, and gains almost instant acceptance at the school, a milieu which had initially been so indifferent to her plight. In particular, the rapprochement, but not friendship, reached between Andrea and her main tormentor, Crystal, may strike the reader as too easily arrived at.
Monica Hughes has a wonderful eye for the minutiae of high school life and the skill with which to reproduce this on the page. Hughes has the subtle cruelty of girls down pat. If all the books in the new HarperTrophy Canada imprint attain the high standard of these one, adolescent readers will be very well served.
Gillian Chan (Books in Canada) -- Books in Canada
Book Description
After fleeing from two particularly nasty classmates, Andrea runs into acurious old shop and discovers a tiny black box with an intriguing maze inlaidon the top. She suddenly finds herself immersed in the other world of the mazealong with her tormentors, Crystal and Sabrina and now is desperately trying tostay alive in a weird world of swamps, deserts and trenches. Although she canstep out from the maze in between her heart-stopping adventures, the other girlscannot, and remain trapped in this alternative world. Is she destined to keeplooking for her enemies forever? Must she help them?
A page-turning fantasy adventure filled with fantastical imagery and loopingplot twists and turns, The Maze is a real winner. Skillfully layering adark, magical world on top of the equally scary real world that todays teensinhabit, Hughes creates a powerful story of girls who are struggling to findtheir own way, despite often difficult odds.
About the Author
MONICA HUGHES, author of almost 40 books for young people, is remembered for her extraordinary body of work. She has received numerous literary awards, including the Vicky Metcalf Award, the Silver Feather Award, and the 1982 and 1983 Governor Generals Awards (then known as the Canada Council Prize). Monica Hughes was made a Member of the Order of Canada in 2002 and received the Queens Golden Jubilee Medal. She died in March 2003.