The Ruinous Sweep

The Ruinous Sweep

by Tim Wynne-Jones
The Ruinous Sweep

The Ruinous Sweep

by Tim Wynne-Jones

eBook

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Overview

A rainy night. An empty highway. And no memory. From award-winning author Tim Wynne-Jones comes a riveting murder mystery that will keep readers enthralled until the last page.

On the night Donovan Turner is thrown out of a car on a highway in the middle of nowhere, he can barely remember his own name, let alone the past twenty-four hours. Where is he? Where is his girlfriend, Bee? In an attempt to flag down the next passing car, he startles the driver, causing a fatal accident. With sirens in the distance and the lingering feeling that he’s running from something — or someone — Donovan grabs the dead driver’s briefcase and flees. Meanwhile, Bee is fighting for Dono’s life every bit as much as he is. But when the police show up and hint that he is the prime suspect in a murder, Bee is determined to put together the pieces of what happened and clear his name. With echoes of Dante’s Divine Comedy, this harrowing journey through hell and back is a page-turning tale of guilt, retribution, love, and redemption.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780763699086
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Publication date: 06/26/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Lexile: HL660L (what's this?)
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 14 - 17 Years

About the Author

Tim Wynne-Jones is the accomplished author of numerous young adult novels, including The Emperor of Any Place, which earned seven starred reviews, Blink&Caution, winner of the 2012 Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, and The Uninvited. In 2012 he was named an Officer of the Order of Canada for his services to literature. Tim Wynne-Jones lives in Ontario.

I was born at a very young age in a very old country—England. I ran away from home when I was three with a tea cozy on my head. And if you don’t know what a tea cozy is, that’s because it’s something only people in very old countries use to keep their tea warm when it’s in a pot. Somehow, I ended up in northern British Columbia, Canada, just a raven’s flight from Alaska. We moved a lot when I was a kid, and that’s a big part of what I write about, I guess: not the moving so much as how great it is to have a place you can call home and friends and all that. I grew up. Well, it was bound to happen. But I didn’t grow that far up, if you know what I mean. I went to university and all that and got married and have three fabulous kids, all of whom are grown up, more or less, themselves. But what I mean is that, while I grew up I didn’t grow away from childhood. I still have a whole bunch of it inside that I’m sorting through: an attic’s worth of mostly junk but with some gems of memories and a lot of unanswered questions. That’s probably why I write for kids.


Whatever I write it’s always a mystery. I’ve written more than thirty books: picture books, middle-grade novels, novels for young adults and older adults. But whatever I write there is always something that someone is looking for and there is usually someone who doesn’t want them to get it! I’m thrilled about my thriller Blink&Caution. Blink is a street kid living hard—living on his wits. He stumbles into a big con game and thinks he might get in on the action. Wrong! Luckily, he also runs into Caution, as in “Caution: Contents under Pressure.” Their relationship starts off rocky, to say the least, but then she joins up with him and—well, you’ve got to see what happens. I am crazy about this book.

Three Things You Might Not Know About Me:


1. I lived in twelve different houses by the time I finished high school. I used to wonder if my father was running from the law, but I don’t think he was. He was an engineer with a great sense of humor, although the moving sure wasn’t funny!
2. I got to read with J.K. Rowling at the Sky Dome in Toronto in October 2000. There were more than 20,000 people at the reading. It’s the biggest public reading ever—you can look it up in the Guinness Book of Records!
3. I have never been to Timbuktu. Even though we share the same name. Well, partially, anyway. But what I want to know is what ever happened to Timbukone?

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