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Tin Angel
 
 

Tin Angel (Paperback)

by Shannon Cowan (Author) "When Louis Moss came into our lives in the summer of 1969, I was too preoccupied to understand what he represented ..." (more)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product Description

(ages 13 - 17)  The picturesque Raven's mountain lodge has been in Ronnie's family for generations, allowing Ronnie and her sister to grow up surrounded by nature. But with fewer and fewer tourists coming to the lodge each summer, their father is forced to look for investors, and is killed in an accident on a business trip. The situation leaves Ronnie's mother with no choice but to sell the lodge to Louis Moss – a man Ronnie blames when her idyllic life is turned upside down.

Uprooted from their home in the mountains, the family struggles to get by in a dingy apartment, where Ronnie's fragile mother quickly succumbs to depression and alcoholism. The one bright spot in Ronnie's life is Lee, an outsider like herself. Ronnie offers Lee safe haven at her family's former lodge, but a chance meeting with Louis Moss at the Raven's ends in disaster. The lodge burns to the ground, with Moss inside. Ronnie is the police's only suspect, and as the dramatic court case unfolds, some portray her as a monster who killed a generous man, while others see her as a minor whose rights were violated by detectives.

This riveting novel, set in 1969, was selected for the Quill & Quire "Best Books of the Year" list.


About the Author

Shannon Cowan received her Masters in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia. Her first novel, Leaving Winter, was published in 2000. She won the Eden Mills Literary Prize in 2002, was shortlisted for the CBC Literary Competition, and received the Norma Epstein Award for Creative Writing for Tin Angel. Cowan lives in Errington, BC (on Vancouver Island), and she edits the website youngpoets.ca.

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When Louis Moss came into our lives in the summer of 1969, I was too preoccupied to understand what he represented. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Back Cover
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5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, Nov 10 2007
Ronalda Page, aka Ronnie, has had the perfect childhood. She lives at a mountain resort on the west coast of Canada. She has a loving mom, a beautiful older sister, and a doting father. She loves her life.

Then, after her thirteenth summer, tragedy strikes and her father is taken from them. In order to survive, they must sell the resort to Louis Moss, an old family friend who Ronnie doesn't trust. They then move to a small town near them and try to adjust to the loss of their father and husband.

Ronnie's mother becomes an alcoholic, and her sister takes up with Louis. Ronnie feels alone and not wanted. She is malnourished and ignored. Then, on a fateful night, Louis Moss is killed and Ronnie is framed by the local police for the murder and is tried as an adult.

The treatment of Ronnie by the police is brutal and is the most interesting part of the story. I felt that Ronnie simply reacted to the events of her life and never fought. Even when she goes on trial, she just lets things happen to her. She never lets authorities know what a hell she is living in and never trusts anyone to help her. During part of the story she is set up by a girl that she doesn't really like to let a boy make out with her and thinks that this is wrong but doesn't stop him. I mean, she is told to go behind the gym after school and she does, even though she knows what will happen. She doesn't like that her mother is not there, but she doesn't even try to make life livable. I had a hard time thinking that she didn't know how to cook when she was adept at living on her own in the mountains.

Even with these problems, though, it is a story which will make you think and be thankful for the wonderful legal system we have now.

Reviewed by: Marta Morrison
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