Rather than face the consequences of his attempted shoplifting, twelve-year-old Joel Osler leaves his mothers home in Toronto to go live with his dad and stepmother in Turtle Narrows. He hopes to make a fresh start in the little lakeside town. On the way, he meets a man who shows him the map with its three clues. Joel finds an unlikely ally in the fiercely independent Paige Duggan, a Grade Seven classmate at the school he now attends. Paige lives with her guardian and a growing number of rescued animals in a tiny cottage they call the Mousehole. In an effort to avoid his stepmother and hoping for a dog-walking job like Paiges, Joel volunteers to work at the local animal shelter. Joels past mistakes come back to haunt him when a silver compass disappears from the teachers desk. Is he destined to be the number one suspect every time something goes missing? Joel shows Paige the drawings he remembers from the map, and the two team up to match wits against the man, hoping to discover the meaning of the three clues before he does.
Peggy was the second of five children in a family where the favourite gift at Christmas and birthdays was always a book. Born in Toronto, Peggy spent her growing up years moving from place to place, due to her father’s frequent RCAF postings. Early in life, Peggy discovered a love of writing, and cver the years she'd been submitting stories for publication with little success. But in 1976, with her youngest child starting school, she enrolled in a creative writing course. Since then, she has contributed to several books of local history, has published short stories, poems and plays for children, as well as numerous articles for newspapers and magazines. She is the author of nine novels for young readers, a book of non-fiction for adults and three biographies of famous Canadian women. In 2000, Peggy’s third children's book, “Sky Lake Summer”, was nominated for the Manitoba Young Readers’ Choice Award, the Silver Birch Award, the Canadian Library Association’s Book of the Year for Children Award, and the CNIB’s audio tape version of “Sky Lake Summer” was nominated for a Tiny Torgi Award. Her book “The Deep End Gang” was nominated in 2004 for an Arthur Ellis Crime Writers’ Award (juvenile fiction) and the Silver Birch Award, where it was voted an Honour Book and Finalist. Scholastic Canada recently bought reprint rights to the novel as part of their Grade 4-6 reading package. Peggy’s sixth book, “The Path through the Trees,” was nominated for the 2007 Silver Birch Award and the 2007 Manitoba Young Readers’ Choice Award. Her biography of Laura Secord was shortlisted for the 2013 Speaker's Book Award. Her latest biography, "Molly Brant, Mohawk Loyalist & Diplomat" is due to be released by Dundurn Press in April, 2015. Peggy and her husband have three adult children and eight grandchildren. Peggy is now retired, after working many years as a librarian. She now spends much of her day writing.