Frek's father left the planet in a big hurry after gov (the government) peeped him with their rather invasive brain scrambling techniques. Ever since then, Frek and his family have been seen as kind of renegades and outsiders, not really proper company for the upstanding citizen. Frek follows in his father's footsteps when he discovers that some alien intelligence is trying to get in touch with him - gov discovers it too and comes after Frek. With the help of a Grulloo, a second class citizen with a tail - and some new alien friends, Frek escapes the clutches of gov and blasts off to sign a branecasting deal. Branecasting is only the best and greatest technology craze sweeping the universe. The branecasters hold the rights to produce different races' brains - the watchers get to control the brains and actions of the people/creatures being branecast. Frek doesn't really want that for his fellow earthlings, but once the aliens save him, he doesn't seem to have much choice. Humans are GOING to be branecast, and all he can do is make sure that he gets a good group of aliens to do it! In return, the aliens promise to give Frek an elixir to restore the biome of the planet earth, which under gov has been reduced to only a handful of animals, birds, insects, and plants. Everything is strictly regulated. Frek eventually secures a good branecasting deal, which he sticks to until he can come up with a plan to keep earth and humans from being branecast at all.
Frek and the Elixir starts off with a lot of excitement and novelty. The language and the very genetic fabric of this futuristic earth are so bizarre and engaging that you are immediately caught up in it - much like A Clockwork Orange. Learning about what the world is like in that future (and let's hope it's not ours!) is fascinating. Once Frek leaves earth and starts dallying about with the different aliens things are much more confusing and, despite all of the back and forth between different places and species, less interesting. Still, if you make it through to the end, you'll have some interesting ideas to chew on about our own society and the parallels it has with this make-believe one. How different are we, and what are our goals with this technology WE have. We're probably not going to be branecast any time soon, but what a hoopy insidious idea!