Read The First Chapter From A Forthcoming Novel By Newbery Medal-Winning Author Avi

Listen Now
Photo: Colorado author Avi and Sive Kelliher
Steamboat Springs children's author Avi and Denver sixth-grader Sive Kelliher at CPR.

"When we do wrong, we bind ourselves to other people who do wrong." That's a line from a new novel from Newbery-Medal-winning children's author Avi. It's called "The Unexpected Life of Oliver Cromwell Pitts" and is out May 16.

Photo: The Unexpected Life of Oliver Cromwell Pitts by Avi

The book opens in a seaside town in England. The year is 1724 and 12-year-old Oliver wakes up to discover his home has flooded and his father has disappeared. He finds a note saying that his father has left for London, where his sister, Charity, is in some kind of trouble. Oliver sets out to find his family. During his journey, he encounters an array of criminal masterminds who foil his attempts to reunite with them.

Avi, the pen name of Steamboat Springs writer Edward Irving Wortis, spoke with Colorado Matters host Ryan Warner and 12-year-old guest host Sive Kelliher, who is in the sixth grade at Denver School of the Arts and a winner of the Rocky Mountain PBS StoryMakers writing contest.

Read chapter one from the new novel:

In Which I Introduce Myself after Which I Immediately Plunge into a Desperate Situation.

On November 12, 1724, I, Oliver Cromwell Pitts, lay asleep in my small room at the top of our three-story house, when, at about six in the morning, I was shocked into full wakefulness by horrible sounds: roaring, wailing, and screeching.

Confounded by such forceful clamors, I was too fright­ened to shift from my bed. Even so, I listened hard, trying to make sense of what was occurring. It did not help that the room in which I lay had no windows, so I could see little. Then I realized that my bed — in fact, our entire house, an old wooden structure — was shaking. The com­bination of darkness and dreadful sounds made everything worse.

I dared not move, in hopes that by remaining still, I might diminish both noise and quivering. Yet as if to mock me, the uproar only grew louder and more frenzied, rising to a horrifying crescendo.

Desperately wanting to see something, the better to gain intelligence as to what was occurring, I reached to­ward the floor where I had placed my candle and flint box the night before, only to discover they were not there. The shaking of the house was so forceful it must have tumbled them away. The next moment I heard a slapdash thumping directly overhead, as if stones were hitting our thatched roof.

Midst all this confusion, I recognized the boom of crashing waves. Even this familiar sound was no comfort: My family home in the English town of Melcombe Regis was a tenth of a mile from the sea. I should not be hearing such near water. I had to investigate.

I crept from bed, fumbled for my clothing, and de­spite the darkness, dressed swiftly. As I was pulling on my boots, a ghastly splintering sound erupted directly overhead. I looked up. To my astonishment, a faint light appeared as a piece of our roof peeled away like a strip of orange rind, leaving a large and jagged hole. In an in­stant, a torrent of frigid water poured down, drenching me. What’s more, the wailing sounds grew louder, which I now identified as wind.

Tempests often struck the Dorset coast, but in all my twelve years I had never experienced one so violent. The storm must have hit the shore at high tide — under a full moon — a linking of meteorological conditions, which now and again brought flood. I truly wondered if the world was coming to an end. And, if not the entire world, surely my world seemed to be collapsing fast.

Little did I know how accurate that notion would come to pass.

At that immediate moment, however, my concern was this: I must warn my sister of the danger. Charity — for that was my beloved sister’s name — had her room below mine. Yet, no sooner had I thought of cautioning her, then I re­membered she — six years older than I — had thankfully gone to London two months ago to live with our uncle Tobias Cuttlewaith.

Good, I thought. She, at least, was safe.

It was only natural then that my worries turned next to my father, Mr. Gabriel Pitts — to give his whole name. A lawyer, he had his closet — which is to say his office and private room — on the first level of our house.

Wanting to make sure he was safe, I floundered about in search of the stairs. Ineptly, I found them, and then de­scended with great caution through the blustery, sodden darkness. The water, coming through the torn roof, was flooding the stairway, making it slippery.

After a brief descent, during which I guessed rather than saw my location, I reached the second level, where my sister had her room. It was a little brighter than my chamber, but such powerful gusts were whipping about that I became convinced a wind had smashed the lone window in.

“Father!” I cried, but the sounds that roared about me were louder than my voice. To find him I would have to go down another flight of narrow steps. Accordingly, I gripped the banister as tightly as I could. Halfway down I began to hear sloshing sounds. That suggested that the sea was nearer than I previously thought.

“Father!” I cried again, but received no more reply than before.

Where could he be? Was he hurt? Had he drowned? Could I save him?

As close to panic as I have ever felt, I picked my way down almost to the bottom step where I perceived shim­mering liquid pooling below me. Clinging to the wet ban­ister, wondering how deep the water was, I suddenly felt a gob of water on the back of my neck. It so startled me, my fingers slipped, and I plunged headfirst into the water.

In short, I was in grave danger of drowning right in the middle of my own home.

From The Unexpected Life of Oliver Cromwell Pitts by Avi. © 2017 by Avi. Reprinted by permission of Algonquin Young Readers. All rights reserved.

Related: A Young Reader Helps CPR Crack Open A Detective Story