Résumé
Résumé
Robyn's scared of dogs--like, really scared. But she agrees to spend her summer working at an animal shelter anyway. (It's a long story.) Robyn soon discovers that many juvenile offenders also volunteer at the shelter--including Nick D'Angelo, a boy from Robyn's past. A boy she hoped to never see again. Nick has a talent for getting into trouble, but after his latest arrest, Robyn suspects that he just might be innocent. And she sets out to prove it...
Critiques (4)
Critique de School Library Journal
Gr 6-10-Though this mystery has some clunky writing, the characters are engaging. When Trisha, Robyn's weird history project partner disappears, the 15-year-old worries that she's responsible because she said some mean things to the unpopular girl. Robyn's father, the owner of a private security company and an ex-cop, is an old acquaintance of Trisha's stepfather. After he takes the case, Robyn gets involved in finding the missing teen. The fact that Robyn's boyfriend, Nick, is finishing a sentence in a group home and knows some of the same tough characters as Trisha helps the investigation. A suspicious fire at a horse stable and an insurance fraud cover-up add to the suspense. Along the way the teen sleuth faces some setbacks: Nick is being abused by his aunt's boyfriend, Robyn has to convince Trisha's protective friends to let her deliver a message to the runaway from her sick mother, and then Robyn's father is beaten. Stereotypes about appearances prevail. Despite the flaws, the fast pace and good girl/not-so-bad-boy relationship dynamic make this novel a strong pick for reluctant readers.-Tina Zubak, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, PA (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Critique de Horn Book
The first two titles in this series introduce readers to teen mystery-solver Robyn. In Chance, Robyn begins a surprising relationship with bad-boy Nick and his even scarier dog. In Run, she helps look for a missing classmate only to find she may have made the situation worse. Both story lines are contrived, but the characters are interesting and generally believable. [Review covers these Robyn Hunter Mysteries titles: Last Chance and You Can Run.] (c) Copyright 2012. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Critique de Kirkus
You Can Run, publishes simultaneously. Great for dog lovers and young mystery fans. (Mystery. 12-16)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Critique de Booklist
The first Robyn Hunter mystery to be distributed in this country plunges readers into the eponymous 15-year-old's life as, in compensation for some accidental window breakage during an anti-animal-testing rally, she is forced to volunteer at an animal shelter. There, while confronting her own deep-seated fear of dogs (the result of a childhood bite), Robyn connects with Nick D'Angelo a hardcase teen offender from her past whose participation in an experimental rehabilitation program is threatened when he is arrested for a joyride that leaves a pedestrian injured. Sensing something fishy in Nick's guilty plea, Robyn engages in a whirl of clever detective work and deduction to get to the sad but redemptive truth. Readers who prefer contemporary characters and issues, well-reasoned solutions, and moderate amounts of danger in their mysteries will enjoy these new editions of an older Canadian series.--Peters, John Copyright 2010 Booklist