This book was SUCH a goofy ride. Definitely written for (and maybe by?) teenage boys, the plot takes us from the trials and traumas of high school through war and explosions and kidnappings and crushes and so many sports and finally a nice, flashy show-down with a bad guy. It's waaaay over the top, and every bit the kind of thing I needed to read after my last few grim installments. The description promises a "laugh out loud" read, and I sure enough did guffaw into my peas (I spent a lot of time gardening while listening to this) more than once.
My primary thought, early on, was that Savio was showing off his knowledge of history by allowing his 1500-year-old teenage protagonist to have been present for just about every major event in history (he worked for Shakespeare, Leonardo da Vinci, Paul Revere, ... I'm forgetting many). The guy has an uncanny ability to know where and when the most famous people will turn out. There's an attempted explanation for this in the story (he actively seeks out the "cauldrons of change"), but it's still a little much. Especially for a kid who is currently going through his umpteenth round of being a junior in high school in a podunk town. Why is someone seeking cauldrons of change hanging out in high school?
Deeper into the story, though, I was fully immersed in the world Savio has created, and came to appreciate a lot of the intricacies and rationalizations he provides. The notion of immortality as the result of a genetic defect is fricking brilliant, actually. To ponder upon the ways such people would choose to conduct their lives is also a fascinating thought experiment.
The plot itself was... well, it was Alexander reminiscing on all the famous situations he's been in, plus him and a few of his high school buddies running away from bad guys with completely unknown motives. We don't learn their motives until the very end of the book, which makes the inexplicable chase a bit annoying, but the revelation is another instance of goofy fun. On the other hand, I don't really understand how the bad guy expects to accomplish what he aims to accomplish, so it's also a little baffling.
Anyway. Fun romp into something totally silly and a little thought-provoking.