Jake McCauley is twelve-years old, lives just outside an air force base with his mother, and it is the early 1950s. Jake's dad was listed as MIA in World War II, and Jake still holds out hope that his dad is alive. Jake and his mom get along okay, but they never have a lot of money. Which is why his mom decides to rent out the attic to a boarder. And Jake is immediately suspicious of the new boarder, Mr. Shubin, because Shubin is Russian. Well, Shubin's parents were Russian, so that makes him a disgusting Commie, right? This is the early 1950s, the Cold War is hot, and the Red Scare permeates all aspects of American life. And with a Russian living upstairs, who is probably spying on the air force base and Jake's next-door neighbors, and who is getting uncomfortably sweet and flirty with Jake's mom, Jake's life turns upside-down. The kids at school no longer trust him, he has a run-in with the FBI, and now he's trailing Shubin, looking for proof that the Russian is a spy. Except, the spy business is really, really confusing. And Jake is beginning to wonder if his dad will ever come back home. And, maybe, all this hatred of communism is getting out of hand. Jake just wants to know the truth. And truth is, if anything, elusive.
Like any good suspenseful spy novel, this story kept me on my toes. Yelchin has always found the perfect way to let readers know the complexities and contradictions inherent in all ideologies. His characters are always living in an adult world, full of scary things like atomic bombs, death camps, government agents, and propaganda. Yelchin's characters are always trying to navigate their lives through messy adult ideologies. And Jake's story is no different. This kid risks his life over and over again, and the reader is just as confused as Jake as to what is really the truth. Just like an Alfred Hitchcock movie, the reader is kept in suspense, never knowing exactly who is the real spy, and who should Jake trust. There is an excellent plot-twist at the end that I definitely did not see coming. Every page is full of action, and the story moves quickly. Jake is battered, beaten, and exhausted, with multiple attempts on his life, all by the end of this 300+ book. At times, it felt like a bit much, but the violence is more suspenseful than it is actually violent, if that makes any sense.
Recommended for: middle grade, beginning young adult
Red flags: violence (the kid nearly dies about three or four times, being run over by cars, trucks, and horses, wrecking his bike, nearly being strangled to death by a spy, nearly being shot by an American spy, in a shoot-out between tommy gun-wielding FBI agents and a Russian spy . . . and the list goes on)