I came to this book in a rather roundabout way. I've been on a kick of renting DVDs from my library, and each movie has several previews featured, which are usually "my" kind of movies. I saw a trailer for The 9th Life of Louis Drax, and when I saw it was based on a book, I had to read it. I'm ever so glad I did.
Louis Drax is a very strange boy, one who is very accident-prone, and who seems to be on his eighth life, like a cat. He's bullied at school, called Wacko Boy, and his parents, who are on the verge of separating, have him seeing a psychologist that he calls Fat Perez. He's not a very likeable boy at all, and he talks about things that no 9-year-old boy should know about. And then, for his 9th birthday, his parents take him on a picnic outside Paris, where he falls off a cliff and dies. But then in the morgue, he comes back to life, except he's in a coma. It's then that we meet Dr. Pascal Dannachet, a specialist in the treatment of patients in comas, and the book then switches back and forth between Louis in his coma, and Dr. Dannachet dealing with both Louis and his mother Natalie, as Louis's father Pierre seems to have gone missing after Louis's horrific accident.
But is it an accident? Did Louis tumble off the cliff to his seeming death, or was he pushed?
This is such an odd and strange book, but I must say I really liked it. I'd call it a psychological thriller, although it's rather a slow burn. You keep reading, wondering how everything fits together, why Louis talks about the things he does, why he's such an unlikable kid, why his mother is so attached to him, why his father is missing. And slowly, like a flower unfolding its petals one by one, each fact is revealed to the reader. Jensen masterfully increases the tension with each chapter, even as she makes the reader uncomfortable and off-balance with Louis's internal monologue.
To be honest, I wasn't even sure I even liked this book until I reached the end, and then I was blown away by how Jensen wrapped everything up. I'm surprised to realize that the book was written in English, with all the French references. And yet it annoys me that the movie has Anglicized several characters' names, like Peter for Pierre (Louis's father), and Dr. Allan Pascal for Dr. Pascal Dannachet.
If you like strange and unusual books, this might just be right up your alley. I loved it.