Truth Needs No Colour
Heather McQuillan
Truth Needs No Colour
Heather McQuillan
Cloud Ink Press
Novel, Paperback, 303
pages
ISBN 978 1 7385943 6 8
‘We know exactly who
you are,’ the warden said. ‘We’ll be watching you.’
It is Mariana’s fifteenth
birthday and the first day of her Year 11 course at her new college. A keen
artist, Mariana will be in the Artisan Grade at the Apace Senior College, run
by the Carapace Corporation. The ‘tipping point’ of climate change has arrived.
The devastated South Island has been declared ‘financially unviable’ and
is now run by the Carapace Corporation.
Home-schooled, Mariana is surprised by the
rigidity of her new school where the lessons are computerised indoctrination.
The Civics class motto is ‘Your Civic Responsibility: Control, Obedience,
Gratitude.’ An art lesson is mainly colouring-in, and Mariana gets low marks
because of ‘unacceptable colour selection.’ Lunch includes Carapace Foodstuffs’ Hexa-Fuel
Protein Bars – made from insects. There is a 3-minute limit on toilet visits
and her counsellor carries a stun-gun. Not only are the students under constant
surveillance; their teachers are too.
Mariana is in trouble from
her first moment at school; she is fined because her red dress is not a
Carapace-made garment. Carapace has re-introduced debtors’ prisons which double
as sweated-labour workshops. Under Carapace, there are strong social divisions.
Christchurch has been abandoned and the entitled well-off live in the
newly-constructed Te Tahi city.
Mariana, however, lives
with her grandparents in the shanty-town of Deans Village not far from the
overgrown remains of the botanic gardens. Grandma Isla sews clothes and quilts,
while Grandpa Jack is a caretaker. The black market operating from the former
Cricket Oval enables them to scratch a living.
Mariana faces her own
challenges with the authorities. She finds that her determination to tell the
truth may bring harm to her grandparents and threaten her own future. Then,
Grandfather Jack breaks his silence and Mariana faces a terrible dilemma.
This highly readable novel
has a large cast of interesting characters from a range of backgrounds. The
plot moves at Mariana’s lively pace from simple classroom events to a major
social upheaval.
Truth Needs No Colour can be read as a grim but readable action thriller as
well as an unusual teenage romance. Young adult readers will, however, be smart
enough to see it, also, as a dark warning about present trends in our society.
This is a story which will make young readers think.
14 March 2025 [Review 3742]
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE:
McQUILLAN, Heather
New Zealand writer, teacher
Heather McQuillan is an award-winning writer, who was born in Kent, England but now lives in Ōtautahi Christchurch, New Zealand. As well as writing for young people she writes short fiction, flash fiction and poetry and has been widely published in Aotearoa New Zealand and internationally.
She has a
Master of Creative Writing with distinction from Massey University and her
thesis collection of short stories was published in the United Kingdom as Where Oceans Meet and other stories, Reflex
Press, 2019. Many of these stories are ‘flash
fiction’ defined as ‘a story between
six and a thousand words.’
Heather says of her career, ‘For a long time I was a
teacher who wrote. Now I am a writer who teaches. The two roles keep getting
tangled.’
In 2005 she won the Tom Fitzgibbon Award and three of her
novels for young people so far have been awarded Storylines Notable Books
awards. Her previous novels for young readers are:
Mind Over Matter,
Scholastic NZ, 2006
Nest of Lies, Scholastic NZ, 2011
Avis and the Promise of Dragons, Cuba Press, 2019
Avis and the Call of the Kraken, Cuba Press, 2024
Truth Has No Colour, Cloud Ink Press, 2025
Heather is the director of the Write On School for Young
Writers, where she works to give agency to young writers.
Heather lives with her teacher husband and their two boys
in Sumner, Christchurch, where her writing loft in the roof of the family home
gives her wide open views of the hills and sea. ‘It’s a small space but it’s
a gorgeous space.’
Heather McQuillan's Awards:
Tom Fitzgibbon Award (2005) Mind Over Matter
Storylines Notable Books Award (2006) Mind Over Matter
Storylines Notable Books Award (2012) Nest of Lies
Storylines Notable Books Award (2020) Avis and the
Promise of Dragons
Otago University College of Education/ Creative New
Zealand Writer in Residence (2021)
Website: https://www.heathermcquillanwriter.com/