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Circle of Fire by S. M. Hall — book cover

Circle of Fire

by S. M. Hall
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Overview

Maya Brown is bored with being cooped up in her grandmother's house over the summer, and is dying to get involved in her mother's intelligence operation against a group of would-be terrorists. But when her mum, Pam, is kidnapped by the criminals, Maya is suddenly plunged headlong into a world of intrigue and danger. Can Maya find out what the terrorist cell are plotting in time, and without putting her mother's life further at risk? And is the mysterious Khaled luring her into a trap, or a secret ally?
An fast-paced thriller by an established author of teenage fiction, with a fiesty and charismatic heroine who will appeal to boys and girls alike. This is a gripping adventure story that also deals sensitively with issues of inter-racial understanding and the social causes behind extremism.
Sylvia Hall has a track record of powerful and exciting fiction for young adults, and Circle of Fire confirms her reputation.

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Editorials

School Library Journal

Gr 6–9—As a young child, Maya, now 15, was rescued from war-torn Kosovo and adopted by Pam, a British intelligence agent. These two events shape much of the story. While out for a run at her grandmother's home (where Maya and her mom were under protection), Maya's mom is kidnapped, and an agent who has been guarding them is killed. The remainder of the book focuses on Maya's determination to rescue her mother at any cost. She ignores the commands of the top British agents at MI6, defies the Muslim contact who was helping her mother track a terrorist cell, and neatly stumbles on circumstances and coincidences that save her each time she encounters violence at the hands of extremists. The story has a happy ending, but the action, suspense, and romance are never fully realized. The characters' lines are ordinary, the terrorist cell inept, and the convenient escapes for Maya a little too hard to believe.—Joanne K. Cecere, Monroe-Woodbury High School, Central Valley, NY

Kirkus Reviews

The first in a proposed thriller series, this book introduces a new heroine, 15-year-old Brit Maya Brown. Maya is devoted to her mother, Pam, a highly placed agent in England's security services. Pam rescued Maya from the horrors of ethnic conflict in Eastern Europe, bringing her west and adopting her. Now, years later, Maya considers herself an average English teen, not the Muslim child she was as an infant. But it is Islamic extremists who are threatening to kidnap her if Pam doesn't stop investigating their terrorist activities. Tucked away in the countryside, surrounded by security guards, Pam and Maya think they're safe enough to go for a quick jog…only to have the threatened kidnapping go horribly wrong when it's Pam who is abducted. Now it's up to Maya to do the rescuing. To save her mum and stop the threat of multiple bombings, Maya must infiltrate the Islamic community in Leeds and separate friend from foe before it's too late. In and around the action, Maya's search explores relevant themes of bigotry, civil unrest, faith and loyalty, as well as the search for self-discovery all teens must make. But the overall treatment of these themes feels glib and oversimplified, and Maya's growth is subverted by the book's mission. Here's hoping future outings fold the big ideas in more gracefully. (Thriller. 11-16)

Book Details

Published
August 23, 2011
Publisher
Frances Lincoln Children's Books
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781847801210

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