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Iz the Apocalypse

by (author) Susan Currie

Publisher
Common Deer Press
Initial publish date
Sep 2023
Subjects
Coming of Age, Adoption, Own Voices, Emotions & Feelings, General, New Experience, Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance, Music

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  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781988761862
    Publish Date
    Sep 2023
    List Price
    $8.99

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Description

A White Pine Award nominee and a Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection!

A fierce voice longs to break free.

A spark ignites inside fourteen-year-old Iz Beaufort when she hears school music group Manifesto perform. Even though she hasn’t written a song since That Place, she recognizes herself in the moving performance and longs to be part of the group, certain that they might actually understand her. But Manifesto is based at the prestigious Métier School, and Iz has bounced through twenty-six foster homes. Plus, there’s no way Dominion Children’s Care would ever send a foster kid to a private school when a public option is available. So Iz does what any passionate, broken, off-the-chart wunderkind might and takes matters into her own hands. Iz fakes her way in only to face a new set of challenges: tuition fees, tough classwork, and new classmates she can’t immediately identify as friends or foes. And if she can’t handle all this while keeping how she got into Métier a secret, she could get kicked out of both school and her current home. But a life with music—a life where Iz gets to have a voice—might be worth risking everything.

An Apple Books Best Book of 2023!

"A compassionate, character-driven story that will particularly resonate with music lovers." - Kirkus

About the author

Susan Currie is an elementary teacher in Brampton, Ontario (22 years and counting). Before she entered the public school system, she earned a living as an accompanist, pit musician, music director, choir director, organist, dinner musician, leader of various music programs for children, and piano teacher. She has written two other books – Basket of Beethoven (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, 2001) and The Mask That Sang (Second Story Press, 2016). Susan is an adoptee who was in the foster care system briefly as a baby, and only learned of her Haudenosaunee heritage (Cayuga Nation, Turtle Clan) as an adult. She is happily married to John and has a wonderful daughter named Rachel.

Susan Currie's profile page

Awards

  • Nominated, White Pine Award
  • Winner, Apple Books Best Book, YA
  • Commended, A Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection

Excerpt: Iz the Apocalypse (by (author) Susan Currie)

Chapter one

 

The opening chord of the music exploded in Dennison Hall,

shattering the silence.

And Iz Beaufort, sitting there in the audience, suddenly burst

into tears like a complete idiot.

“Shut up,” she was whispering furiously to herself.

But as the music gained momentum, she found herself getting

more stupidly worked up, not less.

It was the way the chord looked.

All charcoal grey and black, streaked through with sullen blue,

with flashes of slicing silver. It was like some multi-storey building

that loomed and morphed in Iz’s head.

Meanwhile, Audra Allen started kicking the back of her chair,

saying, “Hey new kid, some of us are trying to watch the show.”

Which was a joke, because Audra Allen had been going around

telling everyone how boring this concert was going to be.

“Sorry,” Iz muttered.

She hunched down in her chair, crossed her arms furiously and

protectively, trying to get the music out of her head. But the trouble

was, Iz and music were totally complicated. It was like some rela-

tionship in which they were always fighting or making up or ghost-

ing each other.

 

Mostly ghosting for the last two years, actually.

That was when she’d shoved her guitar under the bed and vowed

not to play it again. It was right after she’d been in a really bad foster

home, where playing the guitar had led to horrible things she mostly

tried not to think about now. It had been a survival thing, hiding it

away, going undercover, pulling a kind of fog around herself, and

trying not to stand out.

And she’d mostly succeeded.

But here in Dennison Hall, at the most unlikely of moments,

this extraordinary chord was smashing doors open in her head.

Memories were spilling out.

She was thinking about the curve of her guitar under her arm.

She was thinking about placing her fingers on the frets in places

that were homes.

She was thinking about the way she could pick out one melody

line, then add others and see them like threads she was twisting

together into some complex piece of weaving.

“Hey! New girl!”

Iz swung around.

Audra was smirking at her, and the other kids were doing that

thing where you pretend not to laugh but you also want the person

to know you are pretending not to laugh.

“Everything . . . okay?” Audra said.

“It’s great,” Iz said tersely.

“’Cause we’re getting a little worried back here.”

“Sorry about that,” Iz said.

She twisted back around to the front, ignoring their giggles.

Audra Allen had picked Iz out on the first day Iz arrived at the

school. Audra, like so many other bullies, had kind of sensed that

something was not quite normal about Iz. And, restless and bored,

hunting around for something to dominate, Audra had settled on

her, because she had known Iz wouldn’t fight back.

She was right on all counts.

Iz was absolutely no good at normal. Other people didn’t seem

to get all tangled up like she did when they listened to music. They

didn’t seem to picture it as a kind of structure with additions and

passages you could go down. Nor, as far as she could tell, did they

spend all their time fighting with themselves, wrestling between

rebellion and fear and a weird kind of frustrated grief.

Applause exploded over the auditorium.

Iz raised her head then.

The musicians dropped their arms and grinned at the audience.

They turned and slapped hands together, laughed, threw an arm

around each other’s shoulders. Released from the focus and precision

of that wild performance, they were now loose-limbed and utterly

cheerful.

And she realized with surprise—

They were scarcely older than she was.

They were kids.

A man strode onto the stage, amid the applause. He was tall,

with a mop of black hair. He moved easily, like he was completely

comfortable in himself.

 

When he spoke, his voice drifted out mildly, as if he was stroll-

ing around some flower show.

 

“Good afternoon! I am Dr. Aaron Perlinger, and this is

Manifesto, from The Métier School. Let me introduce them. From

the left—Becky, Ahmed, Rina, Jasleen, Kwame, Teo, Will, Bijan,

LaRoyce.”

Applause burst out again while the performers shuffled around

grinning somewhat self-consciously now.

Dr. Perlinger continued, “Everything is written and performed

by these extraordinary young musicians. But that is not the most

important thing about them. They support each other. They build

each other. They hold each other up.”

“It all comes from you, Dr. P,” said one of the girls onstage. She

 

was standing beside a large instrument that looked like an over-

grown violin. “That’s what makes Manifesto what it is.”

 

“Ha! I just walk alongside you all, Jasleen,” he said. “I just en-

courage what’s there already.”

 

Iz was staring, trying to make sense of this conversation. Who

were these kids who could write something as endlessly powerful

and complicated and multifaceted as that chord? And who was this

man who directed them and spoke about how they all looked after

one another? Why did they beam at him like they loved him?

A pain erupted in her out of nowhere, so strong she was bent

over with it. It was a woken-up, broken kind of longing. Because she

had the strongest feeling suddenly that if she tried to explain herself

to these kids, to this man, they might actually understand.

 

Dr. Perlinger said, “That piece you just heard was called ‘Post-

Punk Beethoven.’ It’s the creation of Ahmed and Will and Kwame

 

here. Tell us about it?”

He ushered three boys to the front, who were shuffling around

and bashful but with eyes like intelligent arrows.

They started talking at top speed, filling in each other’s thoughts.

“Yeah, we were kind of riffing on the idea of rebellion.”

“And post-punk is like rebellion on top of the original rebellion

of punk. Joy Division, Talking Heads, The Cure—”

“Then there’s Beethoven. He ushered in a whole new era by

basically blowing up the rules for how you write music—”

“So we kind of mashed them up together, like rebellion on top

of rebellion on top of rebellion!”

Rebellion on rebellion on rebellion.

She had seen that in their music—piled-up strata that were all

about refusing to accept the way things were and fighting against

what held you back.

Maybe that was why she had burst into tears.

Because it had been like seeing her own complicated self looking

back at her.

All at once, she wondered—what would her life have been like,

if Dominion Children’s Care hadn’t spiraled her through twenty-six

foster homes and fourteen schools? What if she had not learned to

be afraid of writing songs and playing her guitar because of what

had happened in That Place? What if there had been a group like

Manifesto for her to join, and a leader like Dr. Perlinger to walk

beside her and bring out of her what was already there?

For the first time in ages, she longed to actually take out her

guitar. She longed to play alongside them.

 

It was like that chord was the Big Bang or something.

The universe inside Iz was suddenly expanding outward at an

unthinkable speed.

Editorial Reviews

A Fall 2023 Top Grade Pick!

 

"A compassionate, character-driven story that will particularly resonate with music lovers." - Kirkus

 

"an endearing musical story beautifully spun out in words" - Booklife Editor's Pick

 

"a highly readable, affecting story of an exceptional young teen, centred around music and second chances." - Quill and Quire

 

"Highly Recommended." - CM Canadian Review of Materials