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In an alternate world, in a nameless totalitarian city, the autocratic Mayor rules the school system with an iron fist, with the help of his Educators. Fighting against the Mayor and his repressive Educators is a group of former students called the Truancy, whose goal is to take down the system by any means possible—at any cost.
Against this backdrop, fifteen-year-old Tack is just trying to survive. His days are filled with sadistic teachers, unrelenting schoolwork, and indifferent parents. Things start to look up when he meets Umasi, a mysterious boy who runs a lemonade stand in an uninhabited district.
Then someone close to Tack gets killed in the crossfire between the Educators and the Truants, and Tack swears vengeance. To achieve his purpose, he abandons his old life and joins the Truancy. There, he confronts Zyid, an enigmatic leader with his own plans for Tack. But Tack soon finds himself torn between his desire for vengeance and his growing sympathy for the Truants….
Isamu Fukui wrote Truancy during the summer of his fifteenth year. The author’s purpose is not just to entertain, but to make a statement about the futility of the endless cycle of violence in the world as well as the state of the educational system. And, as he put it, “I need to be in school myself if I want to write about it.”
“Perfect control through education”: that’s the goal of a despotic Mayor who rules an unnamed City where students are punished for the least infraction. The “Zero Tolerance Policy” is taken to an extreme, enforced by armed Educators, and expelled students are executed. Naturally, repression breeds rebellion, and the Truancy, an underground armed revolt by teenagers, is trying to destroy the system. Fifteen-year-old Tack is just trying to make it through school, but when he meets Umasi, a mysterious boy who trains him in fighting skills, and then loses his sister in a violent attack by the Truancy, he runs off and joins the group, hoping to destroy it from within to avenge her. The Truancy is led by the charismatic Zyid, and Tack’s skills soon make him Zyid’s second-in-command. Gradually, however, Tack’s allegiance to the Truancy conflicts with his desire for vengeance for his sister’s death. Will he accept the Truancy’s cause as his own? Dedicated to “every student who has suffered in the name of education,” this astounding and action-packed novel by a 15-year-old New York City student is sure to appeal to adolescents everywhere with its theme of brave students vs. oppressive educators. It’s melodramatic, to say the least, but highly effective. With lots of violence, martial arts battles, and even a touch of romance, it’s sure to be a big hit, just the kind of subversive tale YAs recommend to each other. Reviewer: Paula Rohrlick
March 2008 (Vol. 42, No.2)
Fifteen-year-old Tack struggles to survive in a dystopian City where the Mayor and his band of goons, the Educators, rule with absolute power. Tack, his sister, and most other young people are locked into the deadly educational system where they are bullied by some of the most vicious and sadistic teachers in teen literature. Some former students, calling themselves the Truancy, have actually managed to get out. Under a charismatic leader, Zyid, these urban guerillas have pledged to bring down the system by any means, at any cost. Tack shuns both the Truancy and the Educators, until he meets a mysterious boy named Umasi in an abandoned part of the City. Umasi, equally skilled at gnomic utterances and deadly martial arts, becomes Tack's mentor and trainer. When Tack's sister becomes collateral damage in a firefight between Educators and Truants, he joins the Truancy, seeking revenge. Increasingly he finds himself torn between a thirst for vengeance and a growing sympathy for the guerillas. Fukui wrote his novel in just one month during his fifteenth summer. It is a big, raw, sprawling action film of a book, combining martial arts, street fighting, midnight raids, rooftop flights, and a high body count. Grammar and style are not priorities here; the sometimes clumsy and cliché-driven text may cry out for a strong-minded editor, but the intended audience will not care. Action rules, and teen boys will swallow this book at a gulp, demanding more. Reviewer: Jamie S. Hansen
April 2008 (Vol. 31, No. 1)
Gr 8-10- Tack, 15, lives in a dystopian society where a corrupt government oppresses its citizens, starting when they are students. A group of young resistance fighters called the Truancy violently strikes back against the system. Tack joins the movement after his sister is accidentally killed in a Truancy attack on a government official. His intention is to murder its leader in revenge, but he finds himself drawn into the group's philosophy and is torn between wanting to bring down the government or destroy the ferocious resistance. This hefty novel is not unlike an action movie or video game. It starts fast and barrels on with not one subtle moment. It is full of elaborate, graphic fights. The characters are amazingly skilled in a wide variety of unbelievable ways. Described as "kids" or "children," they are nonetheless portrayed as expert assassins, brilliant tacticians, even world-weary bartenders. Readers are beaten over the head with how evil the government is, how oppressed the students are, how unsympathetic adults are. According to the back cover, the author wrote the book "in one month the summer of his fifteenth year." He shows a lot of promise, but more experience, in life and in writing, might greatly improve his style. While Truancy may be popular with some readers who feel as though adults don't get them and school is oppressing them, it is a strictly additional purchase for robust SF collections.-Geri Diorio, The Ridgefield Library, CT
Snowwirl_of_Iceclan
Posted January 15, 2009
I love this book i don't know why... Well anyways what a great book i just love how the truancy fights against the city it was a bit sad when_________ died because Tack got really sad.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 5, 2008
Isamu Fukui's Truancy has brought sadness, happiness and laughter to my entire being. His writing may soon be compared with names such as Tolkien, Rowling and Richard Adams when it comes to fantasy writing. Isamu's first novel is a swift kick in the rump to the ordinary school system. It turns your perspective of the school system upside down and inside out. The story takes place in an alternate world, where a city's mayor holds a tight grip on its school system by controlling everything that happens within it. Those who oppose the mayor and his tyranny over the city and schools are a group of former students, expelled from the system, known as The Truancy. The story's main character is Tack, a 15-year-old boy who is overworked in school and at home. His days are bulging with 'slightly' evil teachers, bullies and parents who seem indifferent to him as their child. Tack then meets a mysterious boy running a lemonade stand in a deserted part of the city. He begins to look to the boy as a mentor and, more importantly, as a friend. But when Tack's sister is murdered before his own eyes, everything changes. Tack infiltrates The Truancy, and soon finds himself torn between his motives and his sympathy for the truants. Truancy was written in a month's time during a summer vacation when Fukui was 15. Now 16, he has won a National Gold Award and a Regional Gold Key for separate short stories in the science fiction/fantasy category of the Scholastic Art and Writing Competition. It's two of many awards the teenage writer has won. This is an exquisite example of writing and knowledge of the English language. It makes you feel emotions along with the main character, as well as making you feel as if you could be there with all of them. It is a book that I would most likely read again. I reccomend this book to all young readers. It gives you a since of knowlodge that you dont get everyday.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.The Mayor rules the city through the subtle use of the Bureaucracy starting with students whose minds and behavior are shaped to the mayor¿s ideal of perfection. Every pupil is brainwashed until as adults they do the same things to their offspring who are students. This has led to a totalitarian society in which the Enforcers make sure the students follow the rules those who fail to conform are expelled to live as homeless waifs. One former student saw the Mayor, his Educators and the Enforcers as tyrants. He and other disenfranchised and disenchanted students formed the Truancy who chose to live in a free world. Fifteen years old Tack is stunned when the Truancy Leader Zyid kills his sister in what he calls ¿collateral damage¿ he vows to kill Zyid. He joins the Truancy in order to accomplish his quest and though he has chances he hesitates because without Zyid the Truancy, who is family to him, dies. Tack, Zyid and their enemy will soon confront each other with no telling who if any will walk away. --- Mindful of Huxley¿s Big Brother and Pink Floyd¿s ¿Another Brick in the Wall¿, Isamu Fukui shows what happens to a society when a dictatorship centrally controls the entire education process especially what is learned. Zyid may be a young teen, but he is a pragmatist who believes bloodshed must occur to bring fear into the hearts of the Mayor, the Educator and their inner circle in order to incite a rebellion. Tack is his opposite as an idealist willing to die for his beliefs, but preferring change without bloodshed.. Readers will be enthralled by this meaningful story focusing on the impact of corrupt leaders controlling all communication starting when the citizens are young pupils. --- Harriet Klausner
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted March 15, 2012
Great overall book, its crazy watching tack's character change over time
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Audrey_DePew
Posted January 31, 2012
THIS BOOK ROCKED MY SOCKS SO HARD I CRIED WHEN I FINISHED IT BECUASE THERE WASN'T ANY MORE TO READ!!!
I was in my PE class when I finally finished it during a "silent reading" session, and I wanted to ask my teacher to let me go outside so I could scream off the top of my lungs. THAT'S how freaking awsome this book is.
My boyfriend was hearing about this book for a couple weeks, and I still am just overcome with the feeling of awesome every time I think of this book.
This is NOT normally the type of book I would read, as it does go into very descriptive fighting scenes, BUT I was addicted, and read every last word anyways. I literally started to think like a truant, I swear this book is laced with poison that makes you FEEL like the characters because it is so well written.
I cannot say enough good about this book.
My #1 favorite book OF ALL TIME.
Anonymous
Posted December 11, 2011
Isamu Fukui is a genius.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted November 1, 2009
This book is so good that you can't let go of it even your eyes hurt.
I can't wait for the 3rd book.
This book has everything that you want to read.
I was surprised i liked this book so much. at first i was kinda hesitant b/c i though it would be super super violent and i would hate it. Well it was really violent but i LOVED IT! i never wanted to put it down and got so mad when i had to stop. i just found out theres is a prequel and im going to get it ASAP. truly amazing.
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Posted June 11, 2009
Not worth reading, definitely not worth buying. Another cliched tale full of predictable characters. Fukui tries desperately to disguise old plotlines with contrived "action" scenes.
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted June 9, 2009
To a school, truancy is a school's worst nightmare. In Truancy, by Isamu Fukui, it can also be a school's deadliest one. Isamu Fukui uses a 15 year old teenager to draw in readers and hook their interest. Fukui relates the main character to problems anyone could relate to, and he adds action and adventure along with personal conflict to keep a reader hooked to the end. Anyone within the age group of thirteen to seventeen would be interested with Truancy.
The story is one full of action and adventure. Truancy is about a fifteen year old teenager named Tack. He lives in a place only known as the City. The school system, although unknown to him, is meant to demoralize and destabilize him until he is so worn down he is willing to obey. The school system was developed to create obedient citizens. But some kids were rebellious. A group called the Truancy, led by a mysterious boy Zyid, attacks and kills with cold efficiency. Although these attacks are obvious, the Mayor, leader of the City, keeps the attacks and the Truancy themselves secret. Tack loses a person close in his life during a Truancy assassination, and he runs off to join the Truancy to kill the person who killed the person in his life. The author stunningly uses personal problems with action thrown in at every turn. He presents the story through Tack, guiding us through his feelings as well as a hail of bullets.
Truancy's characters revolve around the setting only known as the City. The City is the general location for the entire book. It is where the City Government, known as the Educators, and the police and military force, known as the Enforcers, are fighting the rebellion of the Truancy. Fukui uses local color and describes the City as just that, a city. A New York type place where the living districts are bustling, the abandoned ones are havens for vagrants, and children are considered to not be worth the time to look after. The characters in Truancy know the City as well as anyone. There is Tack, the protagonist who struggles with personal conflicts of mentor's teachings, conflicts over loyalties. The Mayor, who is the antagonist, is a person with a huge temper, rules with an iron fist, and fights the Truancy and all who stand for it. There is Umasi, Tack's friend, mentor and teacher, who is wise and skillful in body and mind, but exiles himself and chooses to be a pacifist. Zyid, the leader of the Truancy, is a cold-blooded killer and appears to have no emotions, heart, or conscience whatsoever. Standing beside Zyid is Noni, who owes her life to Zyid, but although she draws strength off of him, she appears just as cold-blooded as Zyid. Fukui describes these characters as they are introduced, and he uses their actions, not their words or thoughts, to form and shape them.
So, Truancy by Isamu Fukui is an amazing book. Fukui develops his plot, setting, and characters masterfully, and uses many techniques to form his unique writing style. I would recommend this book definitely to teenagers, because it is a book that would capture their interests and still give them that feeling of not reading. Isamu Fukui takes the book and writes one so that only at every pause to turn the page do you realize that you are not in Tack's world, only reading it.
This book is amazing, it has everything you'll ever need. There's action, adventure, mystery, and a touch of romance. I loved it, and DEFINITELY recommend it to anyone.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted April 8, 2008
Coming from a fellow high school student, I had high hopes for this book. I expected a lot from it and some of its potential came through. Most of it hasn't. It seems like he had a good initial idea for the plot, but it slowly devolves into an adolescent fantasy resembling that coming from a random video game. The characters seemed like an attempt at satire, but came out too serious. Also, the lack of character development hurt this book's already present flaws. The over abundance of weaponry and 'over-the-top' action was ridiculous. I feel very disappointed at the lack of follow through on the potential.
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Posted April 12, 2008
Unlike Eragon (another book written by a young writer)which ripped off every fantasy cliche it could, Truancy is TOTALLY original! Education as a mechanism for control and repression, with the iron fisted Mayor in charge and even a slight sign of resistance resulting in vagrancy leading to death. Exciting battles between Truants and the Educators, extremely interesting warrior traning, the quest for revenge, and even a delicate touch of romance...... Once I started to read, I couldn't put it down. I read it in one sitting! I can't wait to read the sequel that the author says he has already written. One thing which worries me is this: Is the author on some kind of black list at his school? I understand he is at Stuyvesant HS. Without even finishing the book, the English teacher comes out here and trash it is beyond anybody's imagination. The mere fact that one of his students wrote 400 pages book and got it published should make any teacher proud, no? What kind of school is Stuyvesant? Scary! No wonder Truancy was written! I sincerely hope he is not in serious trouble in his school because of this great book!
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Posted April 13, 2008
I love this book. It was so great. All of it caught me on edge and was totally a surprise. Some of it I guessed but it always added up to some thing else I didn't count on. It's a good read and because some of the characters were over dramatic it made the story even better.
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Posted February 22, 2008
I sit, smiling ear to ear, holding a book unlike any other. Isamu Fukui's Truancy has brought sadness, happiness and laughter to my entire being. His writing may soon be compared with names such as Tolkien, Rowling and Richard Adams when it comes to fantasy writing. Isamu's first novel is a swift kick in the rump to the ordinary school system. It turns your perspective of the school system upside down and inside out. The story takes place in an alternate world, where a city's mayor holds a tight grip on its school system by controlling everything that happens within it. Those who oppose the mayor and his tyranny over the city and schools are a group of former students, expelled from the system, known as The Truancy. The story's main character is Tack, a 15-year-old boy who is overworked in school and at home. His days are bulging with 'slightly' evil teachers, bullies and parents who seem indifferent to him as their child. Tack then meets a mysterious boy running a lemonade stand in a deserted part of the city. He begins to look to the boy as a mentor and, more importantly, as a friend. But when Tack's sister is murdered before his own eyes, everything changes. Tack infiltrates The Truancy, and soon finds himself torn between his motives and his sympathy for the truants. Truancy was written in a month's time during a summer vacation when Fukui was 15. Now 16, he has won a National Gold Award and a Regional Gold Key for separate short stories in the science fiction/fantasy category of the Scholastic Art and Writing Competition. It's two of many awards the teenage writer has won. This is an exquisite example of writing and knowledge of the English language. It makes you feel emotions along with the main character, as well as making you feel as if you could be there with all of them. It is a book that I would most likely read again.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted March 30, 2008
This book was outstaning. It made me think about everything that I am going through with school and made me think that my schooling is not so bad. The book made me dazzle with excitement as the next chapter came to be. I was thrown around because of the different things shown that was going on but I didn't mind because I was able to catch on in no time. The book made me want to cry by the end, it was that good. And it usually takes a lot. I read one page and by the second day I finished it. The begginning, middle, and end altogether caught, and dragged my attentionout of me. I give major props to Isamu Fukui. He's good.
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Overview
In an alternate world, in a nameless totalitarian city, the autocratic Mayor rules the school system with an iron fist, with the help of his Educators. Fighting against the Mayor and his repressive Educators is a group of former students called the Truancy, whose goal is to take down the system by any means possible—at any cost.
Against this backdrop, fifteen-year-old Tack is just trying to survive. His days are filled with sadistic teachers, unrelenting schoolwork, and indifferent parents. Things start to look up when he meets Umasi, a mysterious boy who runs a lemonade stand in an ...