Zevi Takes the Spotlight
By Carol Matas
()
About this ebook
Key Selling Points
- Thirteen-year-old Zevi uses his psychic powers to save the life of a famous actor during the filming of a movie.
- This story examines the effects of fame and the importance of choices, while exploring themes of responsibility, empathy and doing the right thing.
- Carol Matas is an internationally acclaimed and award-winning author of dozens of books for young people. She’s written in a variety of genres, including historical fiction, sci-fi, supernatural and thriller. She is also a graduate of the Actor’s Lab in London, England, and pursued an acting career for a few years.
- The accuracy of the movie set and filming scenes was expert reviewed by filmmaker John Kozak, a professor of film at the University of Winnipeg.
- Enhanced features (dyslexia-friendly font, cream paper, larger trim size) to increase reading accessibility for dyslexic and other striving readers.
Carol Matas
Carol Matas is an internationally acclaimed author of over forty-five novels for young people. Her bestselling work, which includes three award-winning series, has been translated into fifteen languages. She has received over 100 awards and honors, including two nominations for a Governor General's Literary Award. Who's Looking is her first picture book. Carol lives in Winnipeg.
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Book preview
Zevi Takes the Spotlight - Carol Matas
Chapter One
I’m famous.
This is how it happened.
A five-year-old girl went missing in North Vancouver, and that night I had a dream—I dreamed exactly where she was. Clear as day. I told my parents, and they went with me to the police. Mom explained to the detective that I have this gift.
The detective was nice. I mean, she didn’t laugh out loud. Instead she checked. I had seen the little girl shivering inside a shed, and I could also see the street the shed was on. It was beside a big old factory that had a huge G marked on the front. The detective found her exactly where I said. Turned out the kid had wandered into the shed and got locked in. It was just a few blocks from where she lived in North Van.
Mom called it a gift when she explained it to the detective. That’s not what I would call it. I can sometimes see the future. I can sometimes dream what will happen, or hear people’s thoughts, or even talk to dead people. Some gift! Unlike other gifts, this one is not returnable.
When I was little I thought everyone saw the world the same way. It was only when I got older that I started to realize I was different. My best friend, Nir, used to tease me. He’d say I knew what he was thinking when we played soccer and that’s why I was always a step ahead. I told him I could hear what he was thinking. Yup, that freaked him out. He pretty much made me tell my parents, who were worried I was sick. But the psychiatrist they took me to said I wasn’t. I was just sensitive.
Anyway, back to my instant fame. Some reporter managed to track me down as the person who had helped the police. I still don’t know how the reporter did it, but suddenly there were cameras at our door. Then there were more and more reporters, until finally the story went viral.
I’m just finishing seventh grade, and I really don’t need this going into my last year of middle school. I was planning to star in the school play next year. I was planning to audition for films in Vancouver. But who wants an actor who’s had his face all over the internet and all over TV news—for being psychic? This is bad!
Okay, so I haven’t had a normal childhood. I’ve managed, though, often by ignoring my psychic abilities whenever possible. My older sister, Jessie, Jes for short, is always trying to figure out some scientific explanation for my powers. She’s a math wiz and has more science medals than she can fit in her room. And she badly wants to know what my powers mean.
Is it because of quantum physics? Some scientists say there is no past, no future—only now. Jes wonders if I could be tapping into some sort of collective unconscious. Like a group mind. But that wouldn’t explain my talking to and hearing dead people, would it? That has Jes stumped for sure.
Still, outside of my family, my best friend, Nir, and Jes’s best friend, Meira, who is Nir’s older sister, no one else knew anything about this.
Until now.
Chapter Two
What’s it like being famous?
I stare at—what’s her name? Lily? Or maybe it’s Luna? She must be the fiftieth person today to ask me that. She’s one of the popular kids, and she has never, ever noticed me before.
The hallway is finally empty, except for the two of us. I’ve been mobbed out here, answering questions every class change.
Zevi, who’s going to win the Stanley Cup?
Zevi, should I go out with Jon or Jordan or whoever?
What about the latest Jays trade?
Then there are the others. Zevi, you’re a total freak. Zevi…
And to make it even more annoying, half of them can’t pronounce my name right. Zeevee
is one I hear a lot. Zev,
I correct them, "and then add the long ee." They don’t really listen, though. They aren’t interested in me, just in the answers I can give them. Which I mostly can’t—or won’t!
Nir barrels down the hallway and saves me, as usual. He’s so tall for thirteen, he looks like a high schooler. I’m almost as tall as Nir, so the two of us stand out in the hallways. Coach Briggs is always glaring at me because I chose Drama Club over basketball, unlike Nir. Coach takes that as a personal insult.
Zevi! Come on! We’re late for class.
Nir grabs me by the arm and puts some distance between us and whoever that girl is.
I can hear her disbelief as we start down the hall. "Um, hello!" I guess no one just walks away from her when she is talking, like, ever!
So have you heard?
Nir asks me.
What?
Guess who’s coming here to film a movie.
Who?
I ask.
Guess!
Who?
Robert Lemon!
Nir