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Henry Franks: A Novel by Peter Adam Salomon

lenaf's review

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5.0

Henry Franks is a novel about a teenage boy with scars that are always itching and a terrible case of amnesia. He doesn't remember anything that happened before the accident, and he suffers from not recognizing his own name or his own father. As Henry slowly unfurls out of his shell around his talkative neighbor, Justine, the newspapers are full of murder reports happening all across the quiet island of St. Simons island.

So first off, having grown up in Georgia myself, I love that this happens in a known Georgia location during specific years and during a very specific weather pattern. I think it's incredible the amount of work and research it takes to create a world within that space, but Peter does a splendid job with it.

Another piece I want to include, and perhaps the part that made this book glow for me, is the clear knowledge of cognitive science and the effects of head trauma. People forgetting who relatives are and sometimes, more importantly, not having the same feelings of warmth as they used to are known side effects of that trauma. Read up on Capgras syndrome for more information on this very real phenomena.

What makes life worse for Henry is that his father seems untrustworthy. And you're not sure if it is a case of head trauma or if he really is acting suspiciously. So you're not sure if Henry's lack of emotion for his father is truly from head trauma and amnesia, or if his father isn't who he says he is.

Anyway, you get the idea of how tangled this story is and how much fun it is to unravel the mystery! I honestly love that about Peter's books. The ending absolutely threw me for a loop too!

I am looking forward to getting to read more of Peter's work!
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