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Jude

AUTHOR: Kate Morgenroth
ISBN: 0689864795

SHORT DESCRIPTION: When his father is brutally gunned down, 15-year-old Jude is a witness. But to save his own life, he can't tell what he knows and becomes a suspect himself. Then another secret is revealed: years ago Jude's father kidnapped him from his mother,...

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Law & Crime for Children
         Editorial Review

Jude
- Book Review,
by Kate Morgenroth

From School Library Journal
Starred Review. Grade 8 Up–Fifteen-year-old Jude believes that his mother abandoned him at birth. When his heroin-dealer father is murdered, the authorities discover that he is the son of DA and mayoral candidate Anna Grady, and that he was kidnapped by his father at three weeks old. His mother welcomes him into her comfortable life and sends him to an exclusive prep school. When a schoolmate dies of an overdose, Jude, though innocent, is implicated. His mother's boyfriend, Harry, the deputy police commissioner, convinces him to take part in an elaborate charade to help Anna get elected on an anti-drug platform. Harry promises that once she's elected he will come forward with evidence that Jude is innocent. Instead, Jude is tried as an adult, sent to the state penitentiary for five years, and finds that Harry never meant to get him out at all. The plot is tight, deliberately paced, and full of delicious twists. Unlike many suspense novels, the characters are as thoroughly developed as the story. Jude, especially, is lovingly written–self-conscious and highly moral, with an angry toughness that balances him into believability. The dialogue, especially between Harry and Jude, is fluid, charged, and revelatory instead of expository. Only Anna is flat; she's merely a symbol of Jude's need for love. The somewhat tiny font makes the prose seem dense, but the story is quick and action packed enough to engage reluctant readers, especially older boys.–Johanna Lewis, New York Public Library Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
*Starred Review* Gr. 9-12. In her YA debut, adult thriller writer Morgenroth tells the compelling story of Jude, 15, who is caught in a world of murder, drugs, and cover-ups that reaches into his Connecticut home and high school. The action is fast as Jude confronts the worst and best in himself, and the story reveals surprising secrets about people Jude thinks he can trust. Sworn to silence by the killer of his violent, drug-dealing dad, Jude moves into the wealthy home of the mother he has never known, and he switches to an elite private school. His mother is up for reelection as district attorney, and to save her reputation, he pleads guilty to a drug crime he didn't commit. He spends the next five years in prison, where he suffers constant abuse. Always he struggles to avoid being like his dad, and he longs for recognition from the mother who treats him like a stranger. There's a minimum of cursing and obscenity, but the dialogue still sounds pitch-perfect, and the intricacies of betrayal and discovery continue to the end of the novel. Readers will be caught by the thrilling mystery as well as Jude's fear, shame, anger, and search for home. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
Erika Holzer author of Eye for an Eye Dark, dangerous, angry, explosive -- and ultimately triumphant -- Jude's gripping suspense and page-turning plot will grab adults every bit as much as young readers. Kate Morgenroth, masterful storyteller and elegant stylist, has a perfect ear for dialogue, an uncanny grasp of psychology that lets us see into the soul of her characters, and an uncompromising sense of injustice that she fuses into her unforgettable young hero.

Review
Erika Holzer author of Eye for an Eye Dark, dangerous, angry, explosive -- and ultimately triumphant -- Jude's gripping suspense and page-turning plot will grab adults every bit as much as young readers. Kate Morgenroth, masterful storyteller and elegant stylist, has a perfect ear for dialogue, an uncanny grasp of psychology that lets us see into the soul of her characters, and an uncompromising sense of injustice that she fuses into her unforgettable young hero.

Book Description
"Listen, you're young. We don't send kids to jail. If you had something to do with this, it's better to tell us. Then we can help you. Maybe it was a friend of yours come to take care of things for you. You've got a nasty bruise there, and your neighbors told us that you tend to get a lot of bruises. We take those things into account, you know. We understand about things like that." "You don't understand anything," Jude said. After Jude watches his drug-dealer father get gunned down at the kitchen table, he's taken from their dangerous neighborhood to a comfortable home, an elite private school, and a mother he doesn't remember. Only fifteen, Jude is under suspicion for his father's murder, but to save his own life, he can't tell the police what he knows. To make things worse, Jude's mother is the district attorney. She can protect him from the police -- but when Jude's classmate overdoses on heroin, Jude is implicated, and his mother decides to prosecute. Jude is determined to clear his name, though he doesn't know that mysteries from his past have yet to be revealed -- secrets that will forever alter the course of his life. Jude's gripping story is at once moving and horrifying as it traces a young man's quest for acceptance and his incredible capacity for hope and resilience. Kate Morgenroth, whose adult novels have been called "nearly impossible to put down" by Time Out New York and "compulsively readable" by Entertainment Weekly, here shows more of her considerable talent.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Chapter 1 The police arrived, then the paramedics, then the police photographer, and after that Jude lost track. There were so many officers and technicians and medical personnel that they spilled out of the small kitchen and into the hallway beyond. They knew what to do with the body lying on the kitchen floor. They knew how to secure the area to preserve evidence. They knew the procedure cold. But no one knew exactly how to handle Jude. Jude sat in the darkened living room staring at the television. He was aware of what they must be thinking. What kind of kid sat watching TV when his father was lying dead in the next room? That's what they were saying in the kitchen. He knew the smart thing would've been to act like they expected him to. He should have cried or something. They had taken his statement, then one of the policemen -- the youngest, the one who couldn't pass the buck -- was assigned to stay with him in the living room. The policeman didn't sit. He chose to stand, like a guard, near the doorway. Jude could feel the officer glance at him every once in a while, but he kept his eyes carefully focused on the television -- so he didn't notice another figure in the doorway until he heard someone clear his throat. When Jude looked up, he saw a man in a suit. The suit was the tip-off. Detective, Jude thought. The man jerked his head at the young policeman, and the officer beat a quick retreat down the hall. Then he looked back to Jude and said, "Hey." "Hey," Jude replied. The detective seemed to take the brief acknowledgment as an invitation, and he crossed the room to stand beside the couch. He glanced over at the muted television. "What are you watching?" Jude shrugged. "Crap." "It's all crap," the man said. "But I watch it anyway," he added. "Mind if I sit?" Jude shifted slightly, as if to make room. The detective sat on the end where the springs were broken, and he sagged almost to the ground. He grunted but didn't comment on it. At that level Jude could see that he was balding at the crown. They sat without talking. Jude pretended to be staring at the screen, but he was really watching the man next to him out of the corner of his eye. Just as Jude thought the man was about to speak, a sharp voice echoed down the hallway. "Where the hell are you, Burwell?" Another man appeared in the doorway of the living room. This man was as thin and sharp as his voice -- except for his face, which had the drooping, wrinkled look of a hound dog. "I thought we were doing the walk-through first," he said to Burwell. His eyes slid over to Jude. "Is this the kid?" he continued, without waiting for an answer to his first question. Jude turned back to the television. He didn't like how this second man talked about him as if he weren't even in the room, but Jude's pointed movement failed to offend him; it just drew the man's attention to the television. "You guys watching Leave It to Beaver or something?" "We're just hanging out," Burwell said, glancing at Jude as if to include him in his answer. The second man moved into the room to get a better look at the television. "Hey, I love this show," he said. "Turn up the sound for a minute." Jude lifted the remote and changed the channel. Instead of getting angry, the man broke into a smiling chuckle. "I see you've got a smart-ass here," he observed, but he said it as if it were a compliment. "Hey, Grant, why don't you go back into the kitchen and make some notes about the scene. I'll be back in a couple," Burwell suggested. "Okay, partner. Whatever you say." Grant looked over at Jude and said, "Don't let my partner fool you. He likes to play the jolly fat man, but he has the soul of a shark." He winked, pivoted on his heel, and disappeared back down the hallway. "Don't mind him. He's an asshole," Burwell said in explanation. He paused, then asked delicately, "I need to ask you a few questions. You okay with that?" "I guess." Jude tugged nervously at a ragged patch of fabric on the arm of the sofa. Burwell pulled a notebook and a pen from his jacket pocket. "Were you the one who called in?" Jude nodded. "Okay. What's your name?" "Jude." "How old are you, Jude?" "Fifteen." "Can you tell me who that is in the kitchen?" "That's my dad." Burwell had been scribbling, but then he stopped. "I thought so," he said. "I'm sorry about your loss." It was a common enough phrase, and the man said it without fuss. Jude realized that the detective must have repeated it a hundred times before. It was just part of a day's work for him. For some reason the thought that the loss of his father -- the only person Jude had in the world -- was just another corpse in a long line of bloody cases made his throat close up. "Do you have any relatives we can call for you?" Jude shook his head. "None?" "No," he said. "There's no one." "Where's your mother?" Jude looked back at the TV. "Dunno. She split when I was a baby." He waited for the man's pity, but Burwell just made a note and plowed on with his questions. "Were you in the apartment when the shooting occurred?" "Umm...yeah." Burwell didn't overtly react, but he watched Jude more closely as he asked him the next question. "Where exactly?" Here was where it got tricky. Jude had spent the last half hour trying to decide what his story would be. He decided that he couldn't lie about being here. Too many people had seen him on his way home, and he had passed a neighbor when he came into the building. So he said, "I was here, watching TV." Burwell wrote for a few seconds. "We'll go over this more later, but right now I want you to tell me about what happened. Do you think you can do that?" Jude figured his best course would be to keep it simple. "I heard someone bust in the door," he said. He paused and had to clear his throat before going on. "They went down to the kitchen and I heard something, like a pop or something. Then they took off." "They?" Jude covered quickly. "I heard them talking when they were walking down the hall." "Only two?" "I'm pretty sure." "So they never came back in here?" Jude shook his head. "And you didn't go into the kitchen?" "Not until they split." "Then you went in?" "Yeah." "And what did you do when you went into the kitchen?" "I called 911." "Immediately?" "Pretty much." "And how long after that did the police arrive?" "Less than ten minutes," Jude guessed. "Do you know why someone might have wanted to kill your father?" Burwell asked, flipping the page in his notebook and still scribbling. "Yeah." Jude had made the decision to be honest here. Burwell glanced up. "Oh?" "He was skimming too much from his shipments," Jude said. Now that they had gotten away from what happened, he felt a little steadier. "His shipments of what?" "Heroin and coke mostly." Jude changed the channel on the TV. "Did he get a shipment tonight?" "Yeah." "You saw it?" "Yeah." "Did you see who dropped it off?" Jude shook his head. "Do you know who he got it from?" "Uh-uh." Burwell rested his notebook on his knee and looked at Jude, his plump face unreadable in the light from the television. Jude expected another question, but this time it didn't come. "So, you think you're pretty tough, I guess," Burwell said mildly. The comment caught Jude off guard. He didn't know what to say, so he didn't say anything. Burwell took his silence as agreement. "Well, I'll let you believe that for a little while. I'm going to have one of the men take you down to the station, and we'll come down when we finish here. So you have maybe" -- he checked his watch -- "an hour or so to think about how tough you are before we get there." He folded up his notebook and tucked it back into his pocket, sliding the pen in beside it. "See, I'm ready to be sympathetic and understanding here, but if you don't tell me the truth, you're forcing my hand. I've been doing this too long not to smell bullshit when it's served up to me. The officers asked your neighbors if they heard anything. They're not too helpful -- apparently no one saw a damn thing -- but your neighbor Mrs. Ramos was pretty positive about one very interesting detail. She said she heard someone kick in the door. She didn't call the police or go out and check because she didn't want to get involved, but she was worried enough that they might try her door next that she stood and listened for them. Mrs. Ramos claims that whoever went into your apartment didn't come out for nearly ten minutes. She was real positive about that. Willing-to-testify kind of positive, if you know what I mean. So maybe you should think about whether you want to tell me what was going on in here for those ten minutes. Ten minutes you say you were here in the TV room and they were shooting your father, and you didn't see a thing." Jude scrambled desperately to think of something to say -- something convincing, something believable. Burwell waited a moment, and when Jude didn't respond, he said, "You see, this detective thing isn't that hard because people aren't that smart." He stared at Jude. Jude tried to stare back, but he found he couldn't hold it. "Listen, you're young. We don't send kids to jail. If you had something to do with this, it's better to tell us. Then we can help you. Maybe it was a friend of yours come to take care of things for you. You've got a nasty bruise there, and your neighbors told us that you tend to get a lot of bruises. We take those things into account, you know. We understand about things like that." "You don't understand anything," Jude said. The detective seemed to hear the catch in his throat, and his next question was gentler. "Okay, maybe I don't, but how can I understand if you don't tell me? Listen, if you're scared about them coming after you, remember, we're the police. Protecting people is what we do." If Jude had only been worried about his safety, he might have caved in and told the detective everything he knew. But the man had trusted him. He had trusted Jude to keep his word and had left him alive. He wasn't going to be like his father, Jude told himself fiercely. When the silence stretched out, the detective nodded as if Jude had said something that confirmed all his suspicions. "Right. Let me explain something to you, Jude. Maybe you didn't have anything to do with this, but if you know something about your father's murder and you don't tell us, that makes you an accessory to the crime. That means you're partially responsible, and if we can prove it, we can cart you off to juvie, and the boys there will make a tough kid like you look like cotton candy. So think about that for a little while, and see if you can remember anything else." Jude thought about it. He was still thinking about it in the interrogation room more than two hours later. One of the policemen had taken him down to the station to wait for the detectives, and the longer he sat there, the more he felt like he wanted to jump out of his skin. He jumped up and paced the room, back and forth, back and forth. The mirrored window caught his eye, and he realized that someone -- maybe even the detectives -- could be on the other side watching. Waiting. Figuring out when he was softened up enough. They already knew he was lying. His story hadn't held up for even five minutes. What would happen if they questioned him for two hours? Would he hold out...or would he break down and tell them the truth? Copyright © 2004 by Kate Morgenroth


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         Book Review

Jude
- Book Reviews,
by Kate Morgenroth

Jude

ANNOTATION

Still reeling from his drug-dealing father's murder, moving in with the wealthy mother he never knew, and transferring to a private school, fifteen-year-old Jude is tricked into pleading guilty to a crime he did not commit.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Readers will need to suspend their disbelief as they begin Morgenroth's (Kill Me First) dark tale of one teen's loss and redemption. In the crackerjack opening, 15-year-old Jude insists to detectives that he was watching TV while his drug-dealer father was shot dead in another room. But the tantalizing mystery of the teen's possible involvement is quickly solved and the rest of the novel gives way to an overly dramatic back story when a detective learns Jude's long-absent mother is the district attorney in the next town. The detectives alert the woman, who comes to the jail and explains to Jude that his father had kidnapped Jude as an infant. She takes her son home with her, but Jude's "dream... come true" does not last long. Harry, her police commissioner boyfriend and Jude's father's former partner, financed the kidnapping (for reasons that go unexplained) and then he sets Jude up to go to prison so Jude's mother (oblivious to the plan) can look tough on drugs and become mayor. In jail, Jude fights off adult males and wins their respect. Readers who can stomach the cockamamie plot will get to the big finish where the wet-behind-the-ears newspaper reporter-Jude's classmate at school-shows up at the jail and writes an expos that forces Jude's mother to face the truth. Ages 12-up. (Oct.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Children's Literature - Heidi Hauser Green

Jude's world is turned on its head when his drug-dealing father is gunned down at their kitchen table right in front of him. Jude and his dad moved around a lot; the fifteen-year-old teen has never known his mother. Now he finds out that she is the district attorney of a neighboring borough. Jude goes from a ratty old apartment to a large, expensive house. He goes from an inner-city public school to a suburban private school. He has some big adjustments to make. And he has a pretty big problem to deal with: he cannot name the shooter who killed his father, but spared his life. As a result, the cops think he may have had something to do with the murder. Later, when a classmate dies of a drug overdose, the cops again turn their attention to Jude. A kid from the rough neighborhoods whose old friends are now dealing, Jude seems like the natural suspect. His district attorney mother, aspiring to the office of mayor, is urged to prosecute her son. Betrayed, sent to prison, Jude is determined to clear his name. Five years of hard time hardens his resolve to find out the truth behind his conviction, and it changes the course of this young man's life in surprising ways. Jude explores the legacy of violence he has inherited from his father, the desire for a connection with his mother, and his own strength in this dark coming-of-age story. Kate Morgenroth's first young adult novel is an intricately plotted, intelligent thriller. 2004, Simon & Schuster, Ages 14 to adult.

KLIATT - Paula Rohrlick

We first meet Jude at age 15, at the scene of his drug-dealing father's murder—a murder that the police suspect he committed. Fearful for his own life, Jude refuses to tell who the murderer really is. Jude's mother, whom he never knew because his father had kidnapped him as a baby, turns out to be the district attorney. Their reunion works out well at first, as Jude's mother protects him from the police and takes him home to live with her and her boyfriend. But when one of Jude's classmates overdoses on heroin and Jude is accused of procuring the drug for him, his mother's boyfriend gives him bad advice—intentionally, Jude eventually discovers to his horror—and Jude, though innocent, is sent to prison, with his mother believing that he is guilty. At first Jude is so angry he earns the nickname "Duck," meaning, "watch out!" because he fights so viciously. Then, frightened by his own fury, Jude turns his energies to obtaining an education while in jail and finally gets out after years of incarceration, determined to prove his innocence to his mother and to bring down her treacherous boyfriend. Morgenroth, the author of two thrillers for adults, writes an engrossing, well-plotted tale with a sympathetic main character, though the use of the third person puts the reader at something of an emotional remove from Jude. Some readers may skim over the many legal details but most will be riveted by the prison scenes and by Jude's tragic situation. Some strong language and violence make this appropriate for mature readers only. KLIATT Codes: SA—Recommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2004, Simon & Schuster, 277p., Ages 15 to adult.

School Library Journal

Gr 8 Up-Fifteen-year-old Jude believes that his mother abandoned him at birth. When his heroin-dealer father is murdered, the authorities discover that he is the son of DA and mayoral candidate Anna Grady, and that he was kidnapped by his father at three weeks old. His mother welcomes him into her comfortable life and sends him to an exclusive prep school. When a schoolmate dies of an overdose, Jude, though innocent, is implicated. His mother's boyfriend, Harry, the deputy police commissioner, convinces him to take part in an elaborate charade to help Anna get elected on an anti-drug platform. Harry promises that once she's elected he will come forward with evidence that Jude is innocent. Instead, Jude is tried as an adult, sent to the state penitentiary for five years, and finds that Harry never meant to get him out at all. The plot is tight, deliberately paced, and full of delicious twists. Unlike many suspense novels, the characters are as thoroughly developed as the story. Jude, especially, is lovingly written-self-conscious and highly moral, with an angry toughness that balances him into believability. The dialogue, especially between Harry and Jude, is fluid, charged, and revelatory instead of expository. Only Anna is flat; she's merely a symbol of Jude's need for love. The somewhat tiny font makes the prose seem dense, but the story is quick and action packed enough to engage reluctant readers, especially older boys.-Johanna Lewis, New York Public Library Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Jude, a likable, well-meaning teenager, endures multiple betrayals in this absorbing thriller. After the 15-year-old's abusive, drug-dealing father is murdered in front of him, he's reunited with his mother, Anna, who his father had told him was dead. An ambitious, successful district attorney, she willingly takes Jude in but has no time for him. Lonely and struggling academically, Jude hopes to make friends by introducing a popular fellow student to a drug dealer from his old, poor neighborhood. When the student overdoses, Jude's life starts taking insidious twists and turns that lead him to prison and later to a dark, surprising search for justice. Although Jude is the only character fully developed here, his generous nature and longing for a family will win readers' sympathy, as they grow increasingly outraged at the villainous acts of those around him. (Fiction. YA)


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