While this was better than Burn Baby, Burn Baby, I found it sort of creepy. I read Burn Baby, Burn Baby, and was massively disappointed. Figured I'd never pick up another book by this author again. Well, a friend of mine happened to get this book and said it was a cool tale of the hereafter. So...give it a shot. Be fair, as every writer has put out at least one tank effort. So, I dove into it.
Sorry I did. While it's nowhere near as poorly written as BBBB (IMO), I found the premise fascinating but the execution....weird. We have Marcus, the high school stud, and his twin brother Carter, the high school pud. They're identical in every way save personality. Total opposites. Marcus is cool, confident, and seems destined for greatness, while Carter seems destined for obscurity. So when Marcus does an impulsive thing, runs a red light on his motorcycle and is creamed by a truck, Carter is now the only member of the family to carry on the family honor, as it were. And everyone seems to hate him for it, because he's the twin that lived. He looks identical to Marcus, but ain't, and everyone just dumps on him. That, for me, turned me off. Some sympathy would be nice...but not.
Okay, things happen, and wouldn't ya know it, Marcus returns from the hereafter as his brother's guiding light. Sorta like in the movie Always (with Richard Dreyfuss and Audrey Hepburn), but set in high school. He counsels him. He even pushes Carter to make time with his girlfriend, Melanie, appropriately weeping over Marcus' demise. Here's where I said "Hold on."
The poor schmuck was practically blasted apart by the impact, his spirit returns, and basically he says, "Here's my ex. Have fun. I'll counsel you on what to do and how to achieve the girlfriend thing." (There's no sex, and if there had been I would have probably put the book down for good). But I found it very creepy that the ghost is offering advice to his twin on how to eventually make out with the girl of his former dreams. In better hands, this would have been rendered odd, yet tender, but the way it's presented here, to me it almost had a voyeuristic element to it, and that turned me off.
Then there's the relationship with Justin, the guy who was driving the truck that obliterated Marcus. Yes, he grieves and feels guilty and rightly so, but when Carter talks it out with him, it came off as awkward and not all that realistic.
What else bothered me was the dialogue. Not the swearing so much--most teens do swear and I surely did at that age (I'd like to think I've refined it over the decades)--but the dialogue itself was stilted. "Hey, what's up?" ad infinitum. Okay, teens aren't always that articulate, but the dialogue seemed to be out of a grade C movie. I couldn't get into it at all. And the novel dragged in many places. Not info dumps so much, just...dragged.
I do enjoy a good novel that deals with the afterlife and the possibilities of someone returning to help out the survivors, either for better or worse. The premise is nothing new, but I've read other novels where it was executed well. This is not one of those novels. Two stars, mainly because there's more character development than in BBBB, but not by much. I know people are suckers for the underdog, but frankly, Marcus should've stayed where he was and not bothered to make a return.
ETA: I decided to give it another go, just on the off-chance I'd missed something the first time around. Time to be fair...and I found that I REALLY disliked it. Sorry, this is no-can-do Crackerjack kinda deal.