Reason for Reading: I enjoyed Libba Bray's Gemma Doyle books so was
up for reading whatever she wrote next.
Summary: The book starts of with Cameron, your typical slacker
16-year-old living in a family that has drifted into typical
modern, busy, note-leaving suburbanites, while he and his popular
younger sister are at that stage where they hate each other at home
and she pretends he don't exist outside of the house. Since Cameron
often does strange things it isn't easily noticeable when he first
starts showing strange behaviour, yelling out at hallucinations and
twitching. Not until he has a major seizure at school and is taken
to the hospital do the doctor's start their weeks long testing and
it is diagnosed that Cameron has Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (often
referred to as the human form of mad cow disease). It is at this
point that Cameron is visited by a punk angel, and sent on a road
trip with his hospital room mate, a hypochondriac teen dwarf. Thus
starts their surreal, hallucinogenic, out of this world journey
across the States which has them visiting a happiness cult, picking
up a yard gnome who think he is a Viking god, meeting a dead New
Orleans jazz player, playing weird TV game shows, being chased down
by the snow globe corporation and meeting up with a group of
scientists who are on the verge of parallel world travel. This is
the tip of the iceberg.
Comments: What can I say? The book is very well written and one
wild ride from start to finish. There is plenty of humour, the
events are so out there that everything is surreal. Written in the
first person of Cameron, the reader knows from the outset that we
have an unreliable narrator. Cameron will tell us the
hallucinations he is having then he tells us the 'real' strange
things he sees. What is reality?
The book's whole purpose seems to be to examine death. The process
of knowing you are to die soon, how you handle that knowledge. When
do you start living? Is it ever too late to start living? What is
living anyway? What happens at the end? There are no spiritual
connections made and for me that made the examination process fall
flat and ultimately meaningless. However you may reach a different
conclusion.
Even though the book's message didn't hit home with me, I enjoyed
the road trip (mostly) for what it was, a lot of eccentric
characters and crazy events. There does come a time in the story
though when everything suddenly became clear and from that point on
I felt the book was longer than it needed to be. The charade kept
being played and the hints kept being dropped to the point of
frustration for this reader. I would have liked to have seen more
of the family's reactions, feelings and coping during this time
that Cameron was away. Finally, the language in the book is very
vulgar and I found that hugely off-putting though I do realize it
was realistic of the characters.
Ultimately, I did have some problems with the story and some other
issues with some of the content that I would rather have done
without but it certainly is an entertaining story. I enjoyed the
characters of Gonzo, the Mexican dwarf, and Balder, the Viking
garden gnome the best. I couldn't put the book down and read it
quickly over the weekend. This book isn't going to appeal to
everyone, and it is not anything like the author's Gemma Doyle
books, but if the strange, phantasmagoric and surreal appeal to you
then this may be right up your alley.