The colour of trouble by Gerry Bobsien
Walker Books, 2012 249 pp. ISBN 9781921720840.
(Age: 14+) Recommended. Maddy's life is going well. She has a
passion for art, a great teacher, a use of a studio, and a
successful on-line business, Make-Do where she and mate
Darcy sell fashions made from recycled fabrics. Plus she had just
bumped into Max, an interesting musician. Her synesthesia, where
colours are infused with sound, and sometimes taste, in her
imagination feeds into her feelings for art and fashion. True, her
mum is working away from home and she doesn't know her dad, but her
grandparent guardians are both loving and supportive, she has good
friends, a twin brother and talent.
But Maddy wants attention and notoriety. She gets a taste for it
when the local newspaper picks up on her DON'T LOOK UP slogans
stencilled on the pavement next to posters of faces looking up. So
when she happens upon an Impressionistic painting in a skip on
'chuck-out day' she isn't just captivated by it but impelled to copy
it. She then enters the copy in an art exhibition under a false
identity. This unravels a can of worms of the cyber fraud and
forgery variety. On top of this trouble, Maddy finds Darcy has
hooked up with another girl.
Teen relationships and the modern family model feature in this very
contemporary novel. It's about being naive, needing attention and
making mistakes but learning and growing. Chapter headings as art
essay topics are an original feature. Bobsein writes about teens
with a passion - it was surfing in Surfache and here it's for colour
and art. Those who enjoyed the award-winning Graffiti Moon
would also enjoy this novel.
Kevyna Gardner