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The Death-Defying Pepper Roux

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Pepper's fourteenth birthday is a momentous one.

It's the day he's supposed to die.

Everyone seems resigned to it—even Pepper, although he would much prefer to live. But can you sidestep Fate? Jump sideways into a different life? Naïve and trusting, Pepper sets a course through dangerous waters, inviting disaster and mayhem at every turn, one eye on the sky for fear of angels, one on the magnificent possibilities of being alive.

New York Times bestselling and Printz Award-winning author GeraldineMcCaughrean has created a gripping tale filled with dark humor and daringescapades, where the key to a boy's lifelies in facing his own death.

Join him on the run—if you can keep up.

336 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 2009

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About the author

Geraldine McCaughrean

350 books327 followers
Geraldine McCaughrean is a British children's novelist. She has written more than 170 books, including Peter Pan in Scarlet (2004), the official sequel to Peter Pan commissioned by Great Ormond Street Hospital, the holder of Peter Pan's copyright. Her work has been translated into 44 languages worldwide. She has received the Carnegie Medal twice and the Michael L. Printz Award among others.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 166 reviews
Profile Image for Betsy.
Author 11 books3,288 followers
February 2, 2010
One Sentence Review: In a nutshell, it's Candide for kids (take that as you may).
Profile Image for deborah o'carroll (offline during 2026).
500 reviews107 followers
September 13, 2019
Re-read September 2019

Since I got a copy of my own, I've been meaning to re-read this. I opened it to look at the first page before bed, and next thing I knew it was 1 a.m. and I'd re-read half the book already. XD Finished it this morning and couldn't stop even on a re-read. Still one of the strangest books I've ever read, dark but also fun, and I don't know why I love it but I do! *hugs book* This author is amazing.

Original review

I read this a few years back, and, if I’m going to be honest, I don’t remember this book very well. All I know is it was one of the strangest books I ever read and I adored it to smithereens. There was this boy named Pepper Roux who thought he was going to die when he turns 14 and there was a lot of running around with pursuits and I think there were candles and scaffolding and back alleys and ships and a best friend I think and it’s all from the unreliable narrator point-of-view of the hero and… yeah. That’s what’s in it. I think. I could be totally wrong though because honestly it’s terrifying how little I remember about this. I very much need to get it from the library again and reread it. I just love this author. She’s brilliant.
129 reviews
June 1, 2011
This is a rollicking, rumbustious book which careers along wildly as young Pepper Roux skips, lurches and dives through life in an attempt to outrun his own fate. It has been predicted by Saint Constance that he will die on his fourteenth birthday, and so he runs to escape the angels that are surely coming for him. The pace takes your breath away as you follow the twists and turns of life that befall Pepper. The authentic French setting offers a marvellous array of situations into which young Pepper is thrust (or thrusts himself – one of the big themes of the book is whether we make our own fate): ship’s captain, telegraph boy, horse trainer, beggar, patient, journalist, legionnaire. He survives off his wits and own instinct towards the good in all things, and they take him far.

At one level, it’s a very simple, almost childlike story. On another, it’s deeply thoughtful and tender. The language is stunning: it sings off the page, piling vivid imagery on stinging observation in a baroque style that’s both richly inventive and beautifully simple. ‘The sky was hysterical with stars’. Doesn’t that startling adjective work perfectly to describe a clear star-crowded sky (and something of Pepper’s state of mind as he looks at it, a sense of the loss of control he is feeling so that even beauty that he’s seen a thousand times before seems teetering dangerously near the edge of insanity?). ‘The words rattled down on Pepper like a million horsehoe nails: too hard and sharp, too bent out of shape to be useful’. Perfect – and bonkers. It’s an image that can’t be picked apart (one million? That would bury him. What are they rattling on – his flesh?) But in its own mad sub-sensical way, it tells us exactly the feeling the words give Pepper. We understand it, without having to construe its sense. ‘Even in Pepper’s own skull, those words slopped about like molten lead’. Yes! That works brilliantly, for me: the dull threat of molten lead, the sullen onomatopoeia of ‘slopped’ echoing Pepper’s grim sense of distress. There’s a passage about angels, fourth paragraph from the end of the book, that I won’t quote here because it gives too much away, but watch out for it when it comes. It says so much, so beautifully, and with the most startling original imagery. This kind of writing is dangerous for the author to attempt: it teeters between whimsy on one side and pretentious obscurity on the other. I think McCaughrean pulls it off perfectly.

You could say the plot is a simple shaggy dog tale of an adventure, with nods to magic realism as it blithely sells the reader the idea that everyone in the tales sees in fourteen-year-old Pepper Roux what they want to find: captain, villain, husband and ultimately, and most happily, son. On another level, it’s a fable about innocence and gullibility. Margaret Fisher, the noted children’s critic, once remarked that ‘it is not easy to draw a genuinely good character and make [them] interesting rather than exasperating to readers.’ At the heart of this book is Pepper’s engagement with all humanity despite being surrounded by brutality and indifference to suffering. Nor does McCaughgrean choose to let Pepper be disabused of the unfashionable beliefs he holds. By the end of the book he may have had one of his deepest convictions disproved, but his faith in angels remains, an interesting and pleasing decision. The book treats lightly of such issues as under age sex and cross dressing without ever writing anything that might cause the most puritanical of readers to raise an eyebrow.
The language and the characters are skilful. I haven’t said enough about the plot. It races along at too fast a pace for us often to be able to stop and say ‘Yes, but…’ and most of the time, we just go with it. But there were moments where I feared the author was allowing herself to create inexplicable events to get Pepper out of particularly bad holes and that troubled me: even fantasy ought to abide by its own logic. It was only as the book drew to a close that I appreciated how finely plotted it had been. I loved learning, as Pepper does, how even the seemingly impromptu and puzzling events made sense once one could see the whole. Details that found their place in the resolution had been meticulously woven into the plot, often many chapters earlier. I do love a book that can do that: it had me slowly nodding throughout the final chapters as the author deftly revealed how each plot point had its justified place in the story. The plotting and the language alone would have made it a hugely satisfying read, but without being in the slightest bit preachy, the book also provokes deeper reflections: the idea that guardian angles come in many strange guises, that there may be patterns to our life, even though we can’t discern them, that people deceive themselves, and that goodness is its own protection.

I loved this book. I finished it with a feeling of deep satisfaction at having found such a humane, clever, poetic and funny story. It's intelligent and unafraid of writing a lot of words (so many teenage books this days read as if someone has precised them down to the bare bones.) I would put this with Holes and Millions as one of my top three children’s book reads of the past few years. If it doesn’t win the Carnegie, the book that does must be something really quite extraordinary.
Profile Image for Lizzy McGovern.
212 reviews8 followers
October 3, 2014
“On the morning of his fourteenth birthday, Pepper had been awake for fully two minutes before realizing it was the day he must die.” This is the opening line of the rip-roaring adventure awaiting the “le pauvre” (poor thing) –Pepper Roux. Pepper and those around him, his parents and aunt, had known since the day he was born that he was not to live beyond his fourteenth birthday. Everyone was resigned to it, even Pepper. The night before he was born, Pepper’s spinster aunt Mireille had a dream of St. Constance, who told her, “in perfect diction,” that Pepper Roux was to die by fourteen. To make sure that Pepper would indeed be going to heaven, his aunt and mother made him go to church and pray all day, every day, on his calloused knees, making sure he was truly sorry for whatever "wrongdoings" he had committed since the last time he prayed. His Aunt Mireille filled his pockets with prayers and messages to give to the saints and family members in heaven. But when the day came for Pepper to die, he, in fact, did not die. He did not want to disappoint, but in truth, Pepper wanted to live. He wondered how this could happen: had he somehow sidestepped fate, shaken off the saints that were to capture him and whisk him away to heaven? He did not know, but felt like an intruder in life, an escapee, and that at any moment the angels and saints would realize their mistake and come after him in a flourish of fire and ice. But even so, when given the opportunity, Pepper sought out a life not his own.

His attempts to slip into other peoples’ shoes propelled him all over France and from one life to the next. He donned the Sea Captain hat of his father, the apron of a butcher's assistant in a fancy department store, as well as stepping into the life of a horse trainer, newspaper writer, telegram deliverer, juvenile delinquent and many more. Through each of these misadventures Pepper was a bit naive, always seeing the best in others and too trusting of some unsavory characters. In every life he led he inadvertently caused mayhem while trying his best to spread joy and goodness in the depraved lives he saw around him. Yet Pepper knew too well that Death was after him. Ultimately, Pepper (with the help of a few surprising friends) came to learn to finally face his own death, and that things and people are not always what they seem. Pepper Roux is one extraordinary character –unforgettable, and the kind of person you would want to know in real life. You want Pepper to succeed and overcome the obstacles in front of him; you also want to protect him from the danger around him. This is a wonderfully crafted story filled with plenty of adventures. It's a book that once finished is not easy to leave behind.

I also must suggest checking out the audiobook version of this story, narrated by Anton Lesser. Mr. Lesser brings the characters to life with such vibrancy and articulates the French words with flavor. Ms. McCaughrean’s sentences twist and turn and are filled with humor and wit; Lessen brings this humor to light in an incredible way that helps the story break out from the pages.
Profile Image for Terri.
1,017 reviews40 followers
September 18, 2011
I tried. I never abandon a book, but I just couldn't get through this one. We read it for a children's literature book club that I belong to (and most members of the group felt the same). Then, when I read the inside back cover and realized that it was by British author, Geraldine McCaughrean, I knew why I didn't like it. McCaughrean also wrote the award-winning "White Darkness," another book that I had trouble getting through.

My biggest beef with the book was the poor use of time and place. It began with the cover, which was very misleading. On first look, the book looks like it is going to be a pirate adventure (1400 - 1500's?), which threw me off in terms of the time in which the story takes place. It isn't until terms like "steamship" and "typewriter" are used that one begins to figure out that the time period is later. I had to read the MARC record information on the back of the title page, which states that the story takes place in the 1900's?

In reality, the book follows the episodic adventures of protagonist Pepper Roux, an unrealistically clever fourteen year old. In addition, for the American ear, McCaughrean's wording and cadence are choppy and confusing.I felt the book was a hot mess. However, it is apparently very popular in England. Unfortunately, I don't think most American teens will find much to like here.

Profile Image for Cheryl.
13k reviews482 followers
October 21, 2020
So strange I'm not even sure how to rate. But I did really like an awful lot of it, especially the fact that it is so original, so trope-defying. Another reviewer compares it to Candide, I saw a bit of The Gingerbread Man. Parts are awfully dark and/or mature for the 11 year old children who will read up to this, and some of the satire will go over their heads. But on the surface it's a fun romp, so maybe they'll read it when 11 and again at 14? I think it would be worth their time.
111 reviews
January 21, 2022
All his life Pepper Roux has been told that he will not live past his fourteenth birthday, as dictated in his aunt's vision a day before his birth. So, when the fatal day comes, and the adults in his life wait with bated breath for his demise, the pressure becomes too much. Pepper runs away. But, instead of fulfilling the prophecy, Pepper finds that he lives. And lives, and lives. Sheltered and innocent, with a big heart and impeccable manners, Pepper travels across France, making friends and enemies and having adventures. The whole time, however, he is convinced that the saints and angels are hot on his trail, angry at being cheated out of his death, and so he never stays in one place for long before shedding his identity and moving on. But the hilarious mayhem he leaves in each past life catch up to him eventually, and Pepper must face up to the possibility that he has a future after all.

This was such a quirky, sweet, and unusual story! Pepper is an absolutely lovable character. His antics in the name of innocence, politeness, and taking care of people around him kept me laughing. My personal favorite was when he tried to help two coworkers who were secretly sweet on each other by sending them each a love note from the other. Then, feeling afraid that his other coworkers would feel left out, he sent love letters to every employee at the department store, creating general chaos! The prose is beautifully written, with lots of figurative language, clever turns of phrase, and thought-provoking deeper meanings hidden in childishly fun situations. Pepper's character development is flawless (as is that of some supporting characters), and there is masterful foreshadowing tied together in a powerful ending. This book has no unimportant details. All in all, a strange and beautiful, one-of-a-kind read.
Profile Image for Ron Gastgeb.
56 reviews11 followers
January 17, 2021
I believe this is what's known as a rollicking adventure, perhaps the a rip-roaring one. It reminded me of the sort of books I read when I was a kid: the kind that obviously don't make sense to an adult, and therein lies the magic.
Profile Image for Nicole.
215 reviews22 followers
June 13, 2019
A cute comical little book. I wasn't particularly impressed, but I did enjoy it and it was an easy read.
Profile Image for Shazzer.
766 reviews23 followers
January 29, 2011
As posted on Outside of a Dog:

Sometimes you should absolutely judge a book by its cover. One of my favorite books of all time, Ahab’s Wife by Sena Jeter Naslund, is a book I must have picked up at the bookstore about twenty times, drawn to its cover image of a lone figure on a beach, before I ever bought the darn thing and began to read it. Covers can make or break you, and when faced with an overwhelming amount of material and a finite amount of time, sometimes snap judgments must be made, and yes, you must judge a book by its cover. And then there are times when you really, really shouldn’t. Geraldine McCaughrean’s The Death-Defying Pepper Roux is most certainly one of those times.

I didn’t pick up Pepper Roux when it was initially released. I was working at the bookstore then, and passed by the book many times. The cover offered me an idea of swashbuckling adventures on the high seas, and that just wasn’t something in which I was willing to invest my time. Fast forward to the end of 2010, when I start to see this title on people’s lists of favorites for the year. I start to think, perhaps there is more than meets the eye, and so when it became available, I snatched up the library’s copy and took it home to enjoy.

I won’t keep anyone in suspense. I loved it, loved every bit of it. I loved it like I love Dickens, and that’s saying something. And in fact, The Death-Defying Pepper Roux is quite Dickensian in its own way, telling a sprawling tale full of colorful characters, centered around a young man called Pepper (and often many other names) who has been told by his meddlesome Aunty that he will be and should be dead at the age of fourteen. This information came to Aunt Mireille in a dream before his birth, the death pronouncement made by Saint Constance (who has excellent diction, by the way). This is why, on his fourteenth birthday, Pepper commits the terrible sin of surviving another day and runs off with his seafaring father’s jacket, commandeers his ship and makes for the high seas.

Here, it would seem, was the swashbuckling I was dreading, but I found none of it on the page. Instead, Pepper is a quiet captain, living under his father’s drunken reputation, and keeps mostly to his cabin, interacting only with the ship’s steward, a cross-dressing man called Duchesse. In fact, Pepper’s high seas adventure does not last long at all, and almost before I knew it, Pepper was busy disappearing into someone else’s life, escaping the wrath of saints and angels alike by continuing to live. Pepper becomes a meat slicer at a delicatessen, a newspaper writer, a telegraph delivery boy, even the deceased husband of a penniless widow. He makes friends and enemies with his peculiar ways and continues to evade the heavenly hoards he just knows are hot on his trail, ready to take him in.

I found so much to love in Pepper Roux; it’s hard to know where to start. I loved Pepper, for one thing. He grows from a single-minded child to a complex human with an incredible heart, an increasing penchant for lying and a natural tendency towards goodness. Not to mention a hell of a survival instinct. I loved Duchesse, especially when the character returns for the novel’s final act. I loved his “dear hearts” and his brute kindness. I pictured him a giant of a man perfect for squeezing like a teddy bear. And I loved the humor of it all. Pepper’s naiveté made for some easy laughs, for sure, but some expertly made sentences were just as enjoyable. Sentences like, “It voided a pellet of undigested mouse parts: its own little explanation of what it had been up to lately” made me laugh out loud, often without really knowing why. That’s the Dickens in it again. Little moments of humane hilarity that tickle the funny bone without so much as lifting a finger to do so.

I’m dreadfully sorry I judged Pepper Roux by its cover in the beginning. I’d like to say I’ve learned my lesson, but if I didn’t learn it with The True Meaning of Smekday, I’m unlikely to have learned it now, either. But I am truly grateful to have been turned on to Pepper Roux and I look forward to being able to press this book into just the right child’s hands and say, “You have to read this.”

One last note on the cover: it has grown on me, but I’ve since discovered the originally UK cover, and much prefer it.

21 reviews
April 11, 2018
Personal Response

Personally, I really liked the book The Death-Defying Pepper Roux. I love the fluctuation of Pepper’s emotion throughout the book. I also like how many of the people in the book know Pepper is not an adult, yet none of them call him out on it. I am also amazed how easily Pepper got away with stealing the identity of all those people.

Plot Summary

The book is about a boy named Pepper Roux who was fated to die when he would turn the age of fourteen. On the day he was destined to die, he stole his father’s ship by pretending to be Gilbert Roux- his father. While on that ship Pepper found out the true nature of his father’s work. He would sink his ships and collect the insurance money. Pepper knew that the ship was destined to sink and he was willing to go down with it. He had nothing left to go to, so he was going to end his own life. But the plan backfires when he turns up washed up on a beach. From there he starts his life over again and pretends to be other people, to forget about his past and run from all his sins.

Recommendation

I would recommend this book to kids the age of 10 to the age of 15. I would recommend this age restriction because the book is very unrealistic and I believe running away from your family is a fantasy for a lot of younger people. I also believe this book could set a good example to younger teens about what actually happens in the real world. Adults may think these things are obvious which would make this book a bit boring for older people.
Profile Image for Sheenagh Pugh.
Author 24 books219 followers
January 20, 2010
I liked this book a lot, but not, in the end, quite as much as I expected to. There's nothing amiss with the writing; as usual McCaughrean is literate, engaging and challenging, not talking down to her readers because of their age. And it's certainly a page-turner, especially in the first half. The problem for me is that in the end, I'm not sure quite where it's aimed and what it's saying.

It is carefully not set in a specified time (the Foreign Legion references aren't conclusive because there have been more French campaigns in the Ivory Coast region than you'd think), but the chronology at the very end implies that its hero must have been born no later than about 1915. Avoiding spoilers as much as may be, young Pepper's childhood has been blighted by an aunt's prediction that he won't live past the age of 14. The book shows him learning, more or less, that his destiny is in his own hands and those of other people, not of saints and angels.

Now it's a fact, of course, that certain children born in the 19th century and the early years of the 20th were pretty well known to be not long for this world, due to what was then known as consumption and later as TB. In the western world, at least, this doesn't happen any more (Pepper himself is clearly not consumptive), and since this book is written for modern children, one must assume she's using this historical condition as a metaphor for something wider, something children can still be affected by. This might well be adult expectations of them and the limits these can place on them. Throughout the book, Pepper exceeds people's expectations of him and gets by pretty well in situations adults themselves have problems coping with. In fact he is accepted as an adult, mainly because, as the book keeps reminding us, people see what they want to see. Only when things have got really sticky does someone get him out of trouble by forcing others, and the reader, to see him at his real age, and this is a clever moment, a reminder of how much we have allowed ourselves to see through other eyes.

Pepper's aunt's prediction is couched very clearly in religious terms; Pepper does literally believe that saints and angels are out looking for him to do him in, and I thought and still think that the logical end of the journey would be Pepper, and the reader, concluding that religion itself was a load of hooey and that angels didn't exist. But that isn't quite what happens; in fact there is a (to me) unsatisfactory explanation for the aunt, late in the book, which basically involves personality failings and isn't terribly relevant to anyone who doesn't have this particular aunt.

The ambiguity, of course, extends to the title. "The Death Defying Pepper Roux" means just about the exact opposite of "The Death-Defying Pepper Roux", which is the punctuation we'd have expected. McCaughrean knows this perfectly well, indeed she uses the hyphenated version of the phrase in the body of the book. So why the unhyphenated title? There could be two reasons: the simpler, which I fear may be true, is that the publishers thought a hyphen in the title looked cumbersome and would Puzzle The Kiddies, most of whom have no idea how to use one because their teachers don't either. If that's so, then her use of the correct version in the text is a subtle rebellion, a signal that she knows how to punctuate even if the marketing men don't.

The other possibility is that she wants the ambiguity, that the book is somehow not about Pepper Roux, who defies death, but about death, which defies (and resists) Pepper. If that's so, I can't see quite how, but the fact that it's even possible rather underlines, for me, that I'm not sure in the end quite what the book's message was. Good read, though.
Profile Image for Lindsey.
Author 1 book14 followers
January 11, 2010
At first I had no idea what to make of this book. I suppose given the cover art and title, I was expecting a story of daring escapades in which a boy who thought he was supposed to already have died was completely fearless in the face of danger, leading a crew of misfit sailors into certain death scenarios and coming out completely unscathed. It took me a while to adjust to the fact that, in reality, it’s nothing like that at all, but is more of a dark comedy about a clever but unassuming boy who runs from death directly into the arms of various strangers who are not necessarily the best type of people to be surrounded by.

The story generally assumes that most people Pepper encounters are going to try to take advantage of him in some way, or, at the very least, completely misinterpret everything about him. However, if you pull yourself out of the narrative for a moment and recalibrate what you’re expecting, the tale of young Pepper is actually pretty funny, especially all of the little narrator intrusions that Geraldine adds throughout the story. My favorite is a little jab at editors mentioning that no editor can read something without changing it. (Having editor disputes lately, Geraldine?)

Anyway, all of that said, don’t take the book too seriously, and I believe you will really enjoy the read, especially the jabs at Catholicism, and the base nature of people. Otherwise, you’ll likely be frustrated that the book is not something different than it is. I recommend this book to young readers who enjoy a good dark comedy.

-Lindsey Miller, http://www.lindseyslibrary.com
Profile Image for Robert.
521 reviews41 followers
December 30, 2009
I've never read any of McCaughrean's other books (although Peter Pan in Scarlet is sitting on my shelf and awaiting my attention). I only picked up the book because of the title and cover, and the promise of rip-roaring adventures of the most appealing kind.

Well, it is a children's book. Not so much young adult, as proper children's literature.

I'm not even going to pretend embarrassment. I enjoyed this book, and here's the review.

Pepper Roux's death has been foretold the night he was born, in his aunt's dream. His father, a sea captain, is mostly absent from his life. Finally, the deadline gets closer and closer ("by the his fourteenth year"), and, on his birthday, which is the last possible day he can die within the terms of the prophecy, Pepper suddenly tries to run from fate...

...and starts adventures which are exuberant, ranging from sea-faring to horse rustling, from journalism to the soldiering in the foreign legion, from shop work to fighting the mafia. Almost every chapter tells a new adventure - it is a quite episodic book, seemingly meant for reading chapter by chapter, before bed time - and every adventure is worth reading about. I suspect I would have loved this book as a child.

As adult, there are some things that irk. Some of the characters are a little too outrageous. Some of the resolutions a little too easy. And the basic premise perhaps a little too demanding on the suspension-of-disbelief front.

Still, it's a pretty good children's book, and I'd recommend it to anyone with a 10 year old (or an inner 10 year old) who likes to read.
Profile Image for Shane.
1,348 reviews21 followers
December 12, 2015
Whimsical. That is the only word to describe this book. I found it to be enjoyable & infuriating at the same time. I wasn't loving it, despaired at some parts of the story, but wanted to finish reading it. In the end, I (mostly) loved the colourful characters, the style of the writing, but didn't enjoy the actual plot.
On a side-note, the writer obviously has a large amount of Catholic guilt from her past, leading her to create a truly horrible character in Pepper's Aunt. I feel sorry for whatever experiences she had that lead to that.
Final side note - what an awful cover shown above! I would never have picked p the book if it had the blue, American cover. The original beige/red English cover is the version I read.
Profile Image for Karin.
1,974 reviews25 followers
February 13, 2010
Reminded me of a Don Quixote-style picaresque tale. Rollicking historical adventure featuring a naive 13yo boy who has been told his whole life that he would die before his 14th birthday. When that day approaches and death hasn't found him yet, he takes off to try and steer clear of her clutches and has a series of mishaps and adventures, meeting a number of colorful characters along the way. Though not completely to my taste, I was very impressed by the author's command of character, plot, etc. Solid, high-quality, children's lit.
Profile Image for Shannon.
47 reviews2 followers
June 30, 2010
I found this book to be full of clever, and beautiful writing - and the story line was never dull, but I did not find myself fully engaged with the characters. The adventures of Pepper Roux as he defies his fate of dying of at age 14 was entertaining - but to me the characters were not developed enough for me to connect with, or care about them. (Most in my book club disagreed..) Overall, a nice read but not one I couldn't put down. (Childrens Lit genre 10-10-10)
7 reviews
October 22, 2017
This book is about a boy called Pepper Roux who, on his fourteenth birthday, wakes up and realizes it is the day he must die. This is wrote by Geraldine McCaughrean. She's one of the most highly acclaimed children's authors and has won The Carnegie Medal, the White bread kids book award, three times, the Guardians Children fiction award and finally the Blue Peter book of the year award.
Profile Image for Lizzie  J.
305 reviews32 followers
August 1, 2018
3.5 stars

This book started off really good for me. I thought that it was an interesting concept about a boy who is told that he's going to die when he's fourteen. In order to avoid his death, he steps into other people's lives and roles and "becomes" them. I enjoyed reading his transition from a ship's captain, to a department store employee, to a newspaper journalist, etc.

Around the middle to end of the book was where I started to lose interest. I thought the ending became really disjointed and confusing (but, at the same time, it almost seemed supposed to be that way, as all the different people come together and figure out exactly who this boy really is.)

And then the end.... I didn't really like it. The speeding summary through Pepper's life, ending with his death at ninety-something, just didn't work for me. No reader wants to find that their beloved character has moved on from us and lived his entire life in the course of two pages.


Swearing: A couple mild swear words as well as one (or maybe two?) instances of a harsher word.

Sexual content: none

Violence: There's a stroke of violence toward the end, as Pepper's friend Duchess gets into some fist fights with other characters. There's also an army sergeant that tries to shoot at Pepper (and, in the process, other people in the crowd.)

Religous/spiritual/magical content: There are frequent references to God, the saints, and priests as Pepper tries to avoid the death that Saint Constance "promised" his aunt.
Profile Image for Tiffany.
637 reviews137 followers
July 6, 2020
I’m baffled by so many poor reviews on this book. I thoroughly enjoyed it & thought the writing was absolutely beautiful.

The tale of Pepper Roux, a boy who was doomed to die by his 14th birthday, this book tells the tale of him running away from death & all of the scrapes he gets into. It’s funny at times, heart warming at times, haunting at others. I truly loved it.

My one beef with this book is that I’m not entirely sure who this book is geared towards. Everything I read said middle grade, but I feel this book is a bit too mature for that age range. In addition to some violence & haunting nightmares, there are curse words (damn, bitch, ass, piss), references to prostitution (the word whore pops up multiple times) & a smattering of drunkenness. Yet, it’s childishness seems to exclude it from adult & young adult fiction (though YA is likely its closest fit).

One other thing to note - there are a lot of religious references in this book (specifically Catholicism), some of which are weaponized on young Pepper. If you’re not familiar with Catholicism or are bothered by someone abusing it, you may not enjoy this book as much as I did.
Profile Image for Jarm Boccio.
Author 1 book33 followers
May 30, 2019
Pepper is on a most unusual journey — to outrun his death. Predicted by St. Constance, who evidently communicated his untimely end at 14 with his tante, Pepper sees the event as unchangeable — until he survives a shipwreck and floats into the next day without incident.

“People see what they want to see,” Pepper observes, as the MC seamlessly takes on multiple identities. With tongue-in-cheek humor (some call it dark), I smiled my way through this entire audiobook, deftly read by the clearly creative Anton Lesser. His myriad of voices keeps one glued to the plot, as Pepper lies his way from one identity to another. Being kind at heart, the boy uses lies to placate, protect and comfort others, until, of course, he is discovered.

The reader will find this story endearing and unbelievable all at once, but will not fail to be entertained. The words woven by the author are a verbal masterpiece — that alone is a reason to read this MG novel!
Profile Image for Jill.
4 reviews
January 19, 2026
This was an entertaining story. Pepper's aunt had a dream and determined the day before he was born that he would die before he was 14 years old. Well, he turns 14, and there he is, still alive. To survive his aunt and her extremely religious expectations of him dying at every turn, he runs off. He stumbles into one misadventure after another, never seeming to die. The story is set in France during the late 1800s or early 1900s, and the plot was at times confusing. That may not be the case if you know a little more about France. It does keep you reading, and you will be rooting for Pepper and Duchesse to find their way to each other and sanity. When the pieces come together it is entertaining and humorous.
Profile Image for James Hamilton.
290 reviews2 followers
April 19, 2023
I finally finished, and the best thing I can say is that it's done. There was just a lot to not like about this, including the fact that the way this was sold was not a great representation of what it was actually about, and the depictions of faith that are presented. Worst of all, the ending so muddled and just not worth it, that I really would have been better off never having read it, or even trying to read it at all. I took a chance on this from the library, and that's okay, but I definitely don't recommend this.
1,247 reviews10 followers
April 6, 2020
A young boy is told by his aunt that she's been told by Saint Constance that he will die on or before his 14th birthday. When the fateful day arrives and he wakes up still alive Pepper Roux decides to take off and look for death to come and claim him. He sets off on many adventures including being a captain of a ship, a telegram boy, and a recruit in the French Foreign Legion (the book is set in France). The book is written for kids around age 10 who may enjoy these adventures.
Profile Image for Ita.
821 reviews
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April 16, 2020
Didn't work for me so I DNF 1/3 of the way in.

I'm just in the wrong mood for this right now. Pepper's aunt is an evil religious bitch who brainwashed him thoroughly. After reading some of the awful things she did to him as a child when he was "evil", I couldn't take it any more. Sadly, it rings true and I'm sure there are lots of kids who are currently undergoing the same type of brainwashing in Murica.

Maybe I'll get the book and skim.
45 reviews
April 9, 2021
Anton Lesser is fabulous as narrator of this audiobook, with such beautiful pacing and character acting. It’s not just the accents, which are perfect to my American ear, but also the energy of each character. He is especially captivating as the sailor Rosh (spelling?), as gruff and sour as you could want avoid. I wish the characters had more dialogue just to hear more of what Lesser does with them.
Profile Image for sara.
36 reviews
April 16, 2023
At the start, not gonna lie, it was boring. There was no hook until like half way through. It took me wayyy too long to even get started with this book and it being so lengthy, it was just a hard read. However, in the second half, it really bounced back and was way easier to read. If I could rate this book a 3.5 I would. Overall, I would recommend this book for someone with a long attention span that isn't bored when a book it taking forever to take off. 7/10
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
294 reviews
July 16, 2018
I read this one a while ago, and I remembered everything about it, except for the title. Huh, funny considering this is a pretty exciting title. Either way, I felt that the book generally lived up to its name, with its, well, death-defying adventure, and I feel like that at one point I thought this was one of those books that deserved a sequel. Well, looks like a sequel never came out.
7 reviews
July 16, 2019
I would like to rate it 3.5 for the plot and the writing.

When I started the story I didnt like it much then it reminded of the movie "Catch me if you can" by Leonardo DiCaprio. I am not saying the story is exactly like that but I related Peeper Roux to Frank (Leonardo DiCaprio) in that movie. I am a sucker for happy ending so I would say my rating increased at the end.
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