Ratings1
Average rating5
Fourteen-year-old Aaron is paralyzed due to a rare form of meningitis. His parents have moved him to a nursing home for care, and everyone around him thinks he's in a vegetative state. But Aaron is very much alive inside his immobile body. He sees his parents coming to visit less and less often, and he sees the strain in their relationship. He gripes about the nurse leaving the same thing on the TV all the time. But he can't communicate with anyone until he gets a new roommate. Solomon, a jazz musician, is in the early stages of dementia, and somehow he can hear Aaron's thoughts. And not only can Solomon communicate with Aaron, Aaron gets pulled into Solomon's retreats into his past.
I'm not sure what I really expected when I picked up this book. Whatever I thought it would be, it is so much more. Johan Twiss writes with such wonderful turns of phrase. He captures both the attitude of a teenage boy stuck in a prison not of his own making and the crusty exterior and heart of gold of an elderly Jewish man who's somewhere he doesn't really want to be. And this story takes us so many places! We see Aaron's relationship with Sarah, Solomon's granddaughter, grow and take shape. We get a tour of history through Aaron's travels in Solomon's dementia dreams. And the characters are so believable, so well written. They felt like friends. I cheered as people started to realize that yes, Aaron could hear and could think and was still there. This story made me laugh, and gasp, and roll my eyes, and want to hug the characters. Well done, Mr. Twiss.
Disclaimer: I received a complimentary advance review copy from BookSirens and the publisher. All opinions here are mine, and I don't say nice things about books I don't actually like.