Malarkey
Synopsis
Brook High is a great grey concrete ants' nest of a school. John Malarkey is the new kid, thrown in at the deep end of Year 11. He's the wrong person in the wrong place at the wrong time. Through what at first appears to be a random meeting, he helps a girl called Mary Chase out of tricky situation, but is subsequently accused of stealing report cards to sell to students so they can write their own bogus reports. He quickly realises it was all a set-up, and that he's been used to take the fall. The teacher who accuses him of the crime gives him one day to prove his innocence. Malarkey tries to track down Mary Chase, but it's difficult in such a huge school. He does, however, discover strange goings-on beneath the surface of the school. There's the fixed football matches, with threats of violence to the team's star player. There's the homework club where money changes hands. There are teachers willing to take bribes. The more questions he asks the deeper he becomes involved in the corrupt under-belly of the school. He's noticed the peculiar fact that so many kids at Brook wear Adidas trainers - black with the three white stripes. He realises that these are the badge of membership worn by those involved in the school's 'mafia', and that there's a hierarchy. The more stripes someone has blacked-out, the higher up the ranks they are. He discovers that the name of the organisation's leader is Freddie Cloth, and Mary Chase turns out to be Cloth's girlfriend. Malarkey is soon noticed for asking so many questions, and receives warnings and then threats to back down. But, with time quickly running out for him, he still has to prove his innocence. And the only way to do this is to get to Freddie Cloth.
Editorial Reviews
"A tense thriller founded on convincing psychology, Malarkey is a compelling British version of Robert Cormier's US classic, The Chocolate War." - Julia Eccleshare, The Guardian
"On announcement of Malarkey being shortlist for the Guardian Fiction Award: A chilling, unflinching read that is confident and challenging." - Lindsey Fraser, The Guardian
"Malarkey... is a fast-paced read, set in a comprehensive school. The hero, a new boy there, has only 24 hours to discover the true identity of the gang who are persecuting him and to clear his own name with the teachers. Ingenious and exciting." - Kit Spring, Observer
"Sixteen-year-old hero has Kafkaesque trouble with the underworld of a comprehensive. Clever, cool, suspenseful." - Nicolette Jones, The Sunday Times
"Don't miss this! It's Keith Gray's best novel to date. Opening with a breathless bag chase, it doesn't let up the momentum for a second." - Michael Thorn, ACHUKA
"a fierce, gritty school story that left me suspecting that schools like Book High really do exist. A gripping and dangerous read that stays in the mind for its chilling reality, the power of the story and the quality of the writing." - Wendy Cooling, Children's Bookseller
"An exciting and fantastic book" - Teen Titles
"'This tense, against-the-clock thriller tackles very big and important issues but is also very, very funny!'" - Boox: nine
"An announcement that this title won the South Lanarkshire Book Award 2004" - Books for Keeps
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