Amazon.com Review
Roommates in a hospital ward, both Rex and Alice are 11 years old and both are "vanishing"--he into a terminal illness (although he calls himself the Prince of Remissions) and she into hallucinations from not eating. Alice has imposed a hunger strike upon herself in hopes that she won't have to return to her cold mother and domineering stepfather. The irony of her choice--death over a difficult life--is bitterly amusing to Rex in contrast to his own situation. The story is saved from pathos by the exchanges of gallows humor among the two kids and a wiseacre nurse, as they spar to see who can put up the coolest front. Rex, for example, refers to an unidentified burn victim in the next bed as Bobbie Q, a quip of black humor that shocks even Alice. But when Rex is taken to the intensive care unit for his last hours, he finally drops his pose of sophisticated detachment to convince Alice that "dying sucks"--an admission that helps her make the choice that Rex has been denied.
This genuinely funny--but also quite serious--novel will appeal to younger teens for its short length and quick pace, and older teens for its sophisticated dialogue. Bruce Brooks brings a brilliant surprise to each of his novels: The Moves Make the Man, with its rich basketball imagery; Midnight Hour Encores, with its vivid invocation of the '60s and the mind of a self-centered cello prodigy; and Asylum for Nightface, a strange book about the search for God. (Ages 11 and older) --Patty Campbell
From Publishers Weekly
Beginning with an out-of-body experience for the protagonist, the frequently dreamlike atmosphere of this novel distances the audience from the weighty events occurring here. Alice is an 11-year-old girl whose hunger strike takes her precariously towards death. Through a series of flashbacks, readers learn that Alice is hospitalized for bronchitis because of her father's and grandmother's neglect, and she intentionally stops eating in order to avoid being released to her alcoholic mother and her hateful stepfather. Alice enjoys the heady sensation of defying gravity with her lightness ("She felt herself going a little higher, feeling a little lighter, a little more joyous"). Meanwhile, her roommate, Rex, a cancer patient, concentrates his energies on remaining earthbound. Brooks (What Hearts) draws a compelling parallel between the two children as they struggle to control their fates. Yet Alice and Rex speak to each other in clinical, self-consciously pedantic terms ("You're the legendary Prince of Remission... Whereas I am merely a girl on a hunger strike... still subject to trifling fears at the idea of disappearing into a total lack of consciousness for an indefinite period, possibly forever," says Alice). These exchanges belie the affection Alice must harbor for Rex in order to justify her actions in the closing chapters. The sense of detachment Alice feels during her "lightness" episodes pervades the novel and even extends to her relationship with Rex. At the penultimate moment, when Alice finally "comes down" to be at Rex's side at the critical juncture in his illness, readers will likely wonder why. Ages 10-up.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
See all Editorial Reviews