Graham Sinclair was born with severely large, webbed, deformed hands. Living in a small town an hour out from London, Graham is an only child staying with his mom and dad, and he constantly gets bullied at school because of his hands. However, his hands also serve as source of a very dark secret. Graham has the ability to fly, and he does so with his hands. After an incident involving this ability scares one of the neighborhood girls, Graham’s parents ship him off to live with his uncle in London. Graham works under his uncle at his shop, and meets Kate and Derek. Just after getting settled in, there’s a massive plane crash in the London streets, and Graham is forced to use his secret in order to save a baby. What he didn’t know was that a reporter, Jennifer Slater, was watching him during the whole occurrence. Graham is portrayed as a hero in the media, but Jennifer contacts him and tells him she knows his secret. Jennifer turns his story into a twisted version of what happened, and the old discrimination that existed in Graham’s old town comes back, even in London. Graham’s mom gets in a car accident, but Graham hesitates to use his secret to save her, because Jennifer could destroy his reputation if she gets any more evidence of his odd ability. After Graham chooses to save his mother, Jennifer realizes the value of Graham’s personality, and chooses to give him the positive spin in the media again.
Those who would be interested in this book would be those who enjoy stories about not fitting in. The main character, Graham, is the pinnacle of social outcast, and I recommend this book to anyone who has gone through a similar experience. Although it wasn’t necessarily down my alley, this book probably appeals to a lot of the general audience, because it has many thought-provoking ideas and social commentation like how we view those who are different from us. It presents a lot of societal issues that aren’t often addressed in most teen novels.
This book was not up my alley. This was a very British novel, meaning the author, Nigel Richardson, uses tons of British idiomatic phrasing and terminology that made many details of the book hard to follow for an American. I thought the idea of the book was a step in the right direction, but the execution was messy and confusing. Graham’s secret wasn’t as realistic or well-justified as it could’ve been, and consequently the book suffered from a weak plot foundation. The unbelievableness of the plot especially doesn’t work for this book, due to its Realistic Fiction genre. I found it uninteresting and difficult to continue reading.