#RaisedByWolves – James Patterson & Emily Raymond
#PenguinRandomHouse
We insist on the truth and nothing but the truth, but at heart we often prefer the legends and fables; stories contain magical possibilities that facts seldom do.
Very few people – if any – believe that Rome was founded by the twins Romulus and Remus, the twins raised by wolves. The residents of Kokanee Creek, Idaho, certainly don’t. When two children, filthy, barefoot, and dressed in rags, ransack a store on the edge of town, and when apprehended, claim to have been raised by wolves in true mythological fashion, the disbelief does not falter. But the children are certainly different, they seem feral, the younger possessing fanglike sharpened incisors, both resorting to growling and biting when cornered.
The elder is a girl, Kai, estimated around 17 years of age, and the younger her brother, Holo, around 14 years old. Although they have no memory preceding their life in the wild, they are well versed in English, literate, and present with evidence of advanced academic education, but they have never been to school, and do not exist on any data base.
Patterson’s publications will probably fill a small library. Initially known for his high-octane thrillers, he became an outspoken promoter of literacy in later years and has written numerous novels aimed at the young adult market, as well as easy-to-read novels and novellas, with various co-writers, including President Bill Clinton, Dolly Parton, and the South African, Jassy Mackenzie.
This novel as marketed is fiction, presumably for the adult market, but it will probably be better received by the young adult market. The co-writer, Emily Raymond, is known as a ghostwriter of young adult novels, and Kai, a teenager herself, is the first-person narrator in the chapters where third person narration is not employed. Her experiences of a high school dance, “What’s so important about jumping around in the dark with a bunch of people you don’t like?” (284) will appeal to her age group, rather than adults.
The writing is uncomplicated, but not patronizing, and several descriptions are expertly done, for example: “I see the way the news hits… - not quickly, like a blow, but like a weight slowly pressing down, harder and harder, until it threatens to crush her.” (251)
The novel is a speculative Romulus and Remus meeting Peter Pan, but, although there is a Wendy, Never-Never-Land is an Idaho forest, and Captain Hook is a mean farmer with a fondness for shooting.
And it reminds the reader that happy endings are possible in stories.
#Uitdieperdsebek