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TWO TIMES A TRAITOR by Karen Bass

TWO TIMES A TRAITOR

by Karen Bass

Pub Date: Aug. 21st, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-77278-031-4
Publisher: Pajama Press

After fighting with his controlling dad while the family tours the Citadel in Halifax, Laz runs off—and then somehow slips through time to 1745.

It’s not an easy place to be. He appears in the midst of the New Englanders’ preparations to attack the French fort at Louisbourg, on Cape Breton Island. The English colonists believe that the white American boy is French—somewhat true since his grandmother is French-Canadian, and he speaks the language fluently. Convinced that the St. Christopher medal that a New Englander captain took from him might be the key to time travel and, at least initially, desperate to return to his own time, Laz agrees to spy on the French at Louisbourg to get it back. There, a French pirate takes him under his wing, giving him the fatherly relationship that Laz has longed for. As he adjusts to the time, it’s only his treasured little sister that he finds himself missing, but eventually that’s enough to motivate him to seek home. The past is accurately and engagingly depicted, and Laz’s reactions to the harsh conditions, especially bad food and filth, are totally believable. If this effort were longer it could be fully immersive, but often the narrative seems slightly jumpy, lacking connective tissue.

Still, time travel is a thrilling concept, and the tale overflows with compelling action, more than making up for minor flaws.

(Fantasy. 11-16)