Tomes in Tokyo

The bookish musings of an American-born Tokyoite.

Restart


This is an awful thing that’s happened to you, but it’s also presenting you with a rare opportunity. You have the chance to rebuild yourself from the ground up, to make a completely fresh start.”


Title: Restart
Author: Gordon Korman
Published On:  May 30th 2017
Published By: Scholastic Press
Genre: Middle Grade
Pages:  256 
First Line: "I remember falling."
Rating: 4


Chase's memory just went out the window.

Chase doesn't remember falling off the roof. He doesn't remember hitting his head. He doesn't, in fact, remember anything. He wakes up in a hospital room and suddenly has to learn his whole life all over again . . . starting with his own name.

He knows he's Chase. But who is Chase? When he gets back to school, he sees that different kids have very different reactions to his return.

Some kids treat him like a hero. Some kids are clearly afraid of him.

One girl in particular is so angry with him that she pours her frozen yogurt on his head the first chance she gets.

Pretty soon, it's not only a question of who Chase is--it's a question of who he was . . . and who he's going to be.
In every school, there's a Jerk Jock. They're easy enough to spot – see that stocky, buff guy dressed in the letterman jacket? He's over there stuffing some nerd in a locker, egged on by his fellow football goons. Yeah, that's him. What's his name? Flash? Biff? Johnny? Steve?

In Restart by Gordon Korman, his name is Chase. Chase's a walking stereotype – he picks on the video club kids, has two lackeys who aid him in his wrongdoings, and his only saving grace seems to be his skill on the football field, which not everybody cares about. That's Chase in a nutshell. Or at least, that was Chase, up until the accident. When Chase wakes up in a hospital bed, he's told that he fell out of a second story window. He is also told that he has amnesia. He can't remember a thing about himself; not his name, not even his own mother!

Although the plot of this book is a bit predictable, I found seeing all the action pan out as satisfying as dumping frozen yogurt on the head of a well-deserving bully. Every chapter sees a switch in narrator, allowing the reader to experience a rainbow of reactions to Chase's accident and hospital discharge. Some rejoice at his return. Some wish that the fall hadn't only sent him to the hospital. Others are indifferent. And all the while, our sans-memory Chase has to puzzle out who feels what and why. Although most of the characters in Restart have a distinct voice and a unique flavor, there are two or three who get only a single chapter to tell their perspective. This left me wondering: was the inclusion of their story all that necessary? If so, why did these characters only get one chapter to share it?

In the end, Korman has done something here that not many authors can successfully do – he has taken a well known stereotype and shaken it up. He has taken our Jerk Jock™ circa every 80s movie ever and has flipped him on his head. Literally. It's like Korman's discovered that ketchup can be mixed with mayo. The result? Something new and fresh and wonderful. Restart is a fast-paced middle grade novel with an engaging writing style that not only entertains, but poses an important question: can people change? Or is your personality a fixed part of you? It's the time-old question – nature vs. nurture?



Is it Clean?

I would say that this book is a PG rating. No foul language is included, though there is some childish name-calling. Bullying is a major theme, so we do see some scenes of very mild violence, such as a kid accidentally getting hit on the head with a fire extinguisher. 

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