You can’t change the past. . . . 
 
When Michael fires his new rifle into the air on his seventeenth birthday, he never imagines that the bullet will end up killing someone. But it does—and Michael’s world is changed forever. Desperate, he wrestles with his guilt and keeps silent as his life begins to fall apart.
 
When Jenna’s father is killed in a freak Fourth of July accident, she’s devastated. As she grieves, she tries to understand why she no longer feels comfortable with her boyfriend, Jason, and why a guy named Michael keeps appearing in her dreams. . . .
 
Swallowing Stones is a haunting novel about choices . . . and devastating consequences.
© Mac McDonald
“I can’t remember a time when books and reading weren’t a part of my life. My mother used to read to me every night before I went to bed. I still read every night.”—Joyce McDonald

Shades of Simon Gray by Joyce McDonald, is an ALA Best Book for Young Adults and an Edgar Allan Poe Award nominee.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR


“I’ve always been a little off balance when it comes to books. I love everything about them. Not just the words on the page, but the way books feel in my hands and the way they smell. I grew up in Chatham, New Jersey, in a house where books lined shelves in almost every room. Most of my life has been devoted to them through one means or another. Over the years, I have worked in the publishing industry, run my own small press, owned and managed a bookstore, edited and published a children’s literary magazine, and taught literature and writing courses at local universities.

“Living in a quiet rural setting in New Jersey, with my husband, Mac, I’ve discovered how much a sense of place inspires the imagination of a writer. For the setting of Shadow People, I used the wild, often haunting, natural world of northwestern New Jersey and the Kittatinny Mountains as a backdrop for a disturbing look at teen violence. In my novel, Shades of Simon Gray, the setting is similar to some of the small, rural towns in this area.”

For more information on Joyce McDonald, visit her Web site at www.joycemcdonald.net


PRAISE

SHADES OF SIMON GRAY

—2002 Edgar Allan Poe Award Nominee
—A 2002 ALA Best Book for Young Adults

“Written with considerable narrative skill, the supernatural elements are so cleverly integrated that the ending is both satisfying and convincing. A page-turning plot, good characterization, and very convincing setting will have this suspenseful thriller driving up library circulation.”—Kirkus Reviews

SHADOW PEOPLE

—A New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age

“The characters are well drawn and the surprise ending is true to our justice system today. This look behind today’s headlines . . . could well be a topic for discussion.”—School Library Journal

SWALLOWING STONES

—An ALA Top Ten Best Book for Young Adults
—A YALSA Best of the Best 100
—A VOYA Outstanding Title of the Year
—A New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age

“Readers will quickly become absorbed in this electrifying portrayal of fear and deception.”—Publishers Weekly View titles by Joyce McDonald
It was all true, then. The nightmare was real. Michael could no longer pretend, as he sometimes did, that there was a chance he hadn't fired that fatal shot. The bullet had come from somewhere in his neighborhood. The chances of someone else in such a small area shooting off a gun around noon on that same day were probably one in a million. He had spent weeks trying to get used to the idea that he had committed this hideous act. But always, somewhere, there had been hope. A bullet traveling a mile or more through the air could have come from as far away as the next town over. There had always been the outside chance that someone else had fired a gun into the air that Fourth of July afternoon. Now that chance no longer existed.
  • WINNER | 1999
    Texas Lone Star Reading List
  • WINNER | 1999
    Texas TAYSHAS High School Reading List
  • WINNER | 1998
    ALA Best Books for Young Adults
  • WINNER | 1998
    Maine Student Book Master List
  • NOMINEE | 2001
    Arizona Young Readers Award
  • NOMINEE | 1999
    Maryland Black-Eyed Susan Award
"Readers will quickly become absorbed in this electrifying portrayal of fear and deception." –Publishers Weekly
 
“The unexpected consequences of celebratory gunfire are the topic of this well-written novel . . . [It] will appeal to a broad audience, and it is a great vehicle for discussions about guns, violence, and responsibility.” –VOYA  
 
“When 17-year-old Michael discovers that he has accidentally killed the father of a schoolmate, he wrestles with his own guilt until he can no longer keep his terrible secret. A compassionate story focusing on both the killer and the family left to grieve the loss of a father and husband.” –School Library Journal 
 
“Deliberately paced but deeply felt drama.” –Kirkus Reviews

About

You can’t change the past. . . . 
 
When Michael fires his new rifle into the air on his seventeenth birthday, he never imagines that the bullet will end up killing someone. But it does—and Michael’s world is changed forever. Desperate, he wrestles with his guilt and keeps silent as his life begins to fall apart.
 
When Jenna’s father is killed in a freak Fourth of July accident, she’s devastated. As she grieves, she tries to understand why she no longer feels comfortable with her boyfriend, Jason, and why a guy named Michael keeps appearing in her dreams. . . .
 
Swallowing Stones is a haunting novel about choices . . . and devastating consequences.

Author

© Mac McDonald
“I can’t remember a time when books and reading weren’t a part of my life. My mother used to read to me every night before I went to bed. I still read every night.”—Joyce McDonald

Shades of Simon Gray by Joyce McDonald, is an ALA Best Book for Young Adults and an Edgar Allan Poe Award nominee.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR


“I’ve always been a little off balance when it comes to books. I love everything about them. Not just the words on the page, but the way books feel in my hands and the way they smell. I grew up in Chatham, New Jersey, in a house where books lined shelves in almost every room. Most of my life has been devoted to them through one means or another. Over the years, I have worked in the publishing industry, run my own small press, owned and managed a bookstore, edited and published a children’s literary magazine, and taught literature and writing courses at local universities.

“Living in a quiet rural setting in New Jersey, with my husband, Mac, I’ve discovered how much a sense of place inspires the imagination of a writer. For the setting of Shadow People, I used the wild, often haunting, natural world of northwestern New Jersey and the Kittatinny Mountains as a backdrop for a disturbing look at teen violence. In my novel, Shades of Simon Gray, the setting is similar to some of the small, rural towns in this area.”

For more information on Joyce McDonald, visit her Web site at www.joycemcdonald.net


PRAISE

SHADES OF SIMON GRAY

—2002 Edgar Allan Poe Award Nominee
—A 2002 ALA Best Book for Young Adults

“Written with considerable narrative skill, the supernatural elements are so cleverly integrated that the ending is both satisfying and convincing. A page-turning plot, good characterization, and very convincing setting will have this suspenseful thriller driving up library circulation.”—Kirkus Reviews

SHADOW PEOPLE

—A New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age

“The characters are well drawn and the surprise ending is true to our justice system today. This look behind today’s headlines . . . could well be a topic for discussion.”—School Library Journal

SWALLOWING STONES

—An ALA Top Ten Best Book for Young Adults
—A YALSA Best of the Best 100
—A VOYA Outstanding Title of the Year
—A New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age

“Readers will quickly become absorbed in this electrifying portrayal of fear and deception.”—Publishers Weekly View titles by Joyce McDonald

Excerpt

It was all true, then. The nightmare was real. Michael could no longer pretend, as he sometimes did, that there was a chance he hadn't fired that fatal shot. The bullet had come from somewhere in his neighborhood. The chances of someone else in such a small area shooting off a gun around noon on that same day were probably one in a million. He had spent weeks trying to get used to the idea that he had committed this hideous act. But always, somewhere, there had been hope. A bullet traveling a mile or more through the air could have come from as far away as the next town over. There had always been the outside chance that someone else had fired a gun into the air that Fourth of July afternoon. Now that chance no longer existed.

Awards

  • WINNER | 1999
    Texas Lone Star Reading List
  • WINNER | 1999
    Texas TAYSHAS High School Reading List
  • WINNER | 1998
    ALA Best Books for Young Adults
  • WINNER | 1998
    Maine Student Book Master List
  • NOMINEE | 2001
    Arizona Young Readers Award
  • NOMINEE | 1999
    Maryland Black-Eyed Susan Award

Praise

"Readers will quickly become absorbed in this electrifying portrayal of fear and deception." –Publishers Weekly
 
“The unexpected consequences of celebratory gunfire are the topic of this well-written novel . . . [It] will appeal to a broad audience, and it is a great vehicle for discussions about guns, violence, and responsibility.” –VOYA  
 
“When 17-year-old Michael discovers that he has accidentally killed the father of a schoolmate, he wrestles with his own guilt until he can no longer keep his terrible secret. A compassionate story focusing on both the killer and the family left to grieve the loss of a father and husband.” –School Library Journal 
 
“Deliberately paced but deeply felt drama.” –Kirkus Reviews

Get Inspired! Books for After-School Clubs & Activities

Coordinating after-school clubs and activities in your school community? Explore our collection of books that will help students discover their passion for new (and screen-free!) hobbies. Focusing on topics such as art, board games, crafting, cooking, nature, sports, and more—these books are bound to spark imagination and movement. Browse the middle school and high school

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