Genre: Contemporary Fantasy/Coming of Age/Humor/Drama
Description:
“One morning 12-year-old Gregory Gourde wakes up in his bed with an
impossible new feature: his head has become a watermelon. We follow Gregory
down a rabbit hole of sorts to a new world and an audacious exploration of what
it really means to be different in this dark yet humorous nod to Kafka's Metamorphosis and Carroll's Alice in Wonderland.”
Author:
“Frank Mundo is a full-time writer in Los Angeles. He has a BA in
English from UCLA, where he also completed the Creative Writing Program. His
stories, poetry, and essays have appeared in dozens of journals, magazines and
anthologies in print and online... Mundo is the author of the award-winning
novel in verse, The Brubury Tales
(foreword by bestselling author and critic Carolyn See), a modern version of The Canterbury Tales, set in Los
Angeles; and Gary, the Four-Eyed Fairy
and Other Stories, an interconnected collection of his very best short
stories published over the last 15 years.”
Appraisal:
Gregory Gourde certainly does take a trip down the rabbit hole in this
dark fantasy; I felt like he was skating on the edge of madness for most of
this story. Surely this is not what it is like for most boys going through
puberty. But the author’s prose had me convinced that it had been for him.
Frank Mundo does not just throw words at the page in hopes that they stick.
There is much thought put into the words he chooses and this story will leave
you thinking about it long after you have finished the story. This is the sign
of a true wordsmith.
The story is told through Gregory's eyes with an omniscient narrator
who pops in occasionally to move the story along or fill in past events of
Gregory's life or other characters that played an important role. This is
masterfully handled by the author and gave me a chance to let things soak in.
Gregory is desperately seeking sanity and consistency despite his dysfunctional
family. He is a smart kid and until he embraces and accepts himself for who he
really is things go awry. Especially when he is told he does not belong in this
alternate reality.
This was not an easy read for me, I tend to get too involved with the
characters in the stories I read. So when things do not go well for the
characters I have invested in I feel their pain. That is why I try to stick
with fantasy. Gregory's problems are realistic, the manifestation of his
problems are fantasy but certainly real in his mind.
The characters are beautifully written and darkly wonderful in their
own way. The plot moves at a nice pace throughout the book. This is a fantastic
journey of self-discovery, and I am glad I survived the trip as well as
Gregory.
Buy now
from: Amazon US Amazon UK
FYI:
Adult language and content. Not for children.
The artwork included in this story is excellent, it adds a dimension
not usually found in books. I read this on my Paperwhite and the images came
across beautifully.
Added for
Reprise Review: Different by Frank Mundo was a nominee in the Fantasy
category for B&P 2014 Readers' Choice Awards. Original review ran December
31, 2013.
Format/Typo
Issues:
I found no significant errors.
Rating:
***** Five Stars
Reviewed
by: ?wazithinkin
Approximate word count: 30-35,000 words
No comments:
Post a Comment