Paperback ©2006 | -- |
In this atmospheric, British supernatural thriller, a stranger comes to town. Fifteen-year-old Dusty first hears his voice on the telephone, and she is startled by his words st said to her in similar language by her long-missing older brother, Josh. As snow falls on the remote English countryside where Dusty lives, she searches for the mysterious boy, and the closer she comes to him (and he to her), the more danger surrounds her. Bowler's writing chills, both in the way the author heightens the tension, chapter by terrifying chapter, and through his descriptions of the relentless snow beating down, brightening and frightening e frozen fire of the title. Sometimes the descriptions burden the story, because readers will be anxious to get back to the compelling interplay between Dusty and the boy. Both spectral and powerful, the boy sends messages (by phone, in person, even through the snow) that propel Dusty forward, always hoping the boy will lead her to Josh. The tension doesn't wane until the last possible moment.
Kirkus ReviewsShimmering suspense and atmosphere highlight Bowler's trademark mysteriousness. Dusty answers the phone late at night and hears a stranger announce, "I'm dying." He isn't (though he wants to be), and he knows intimate details about her that no one should know. Furthermore, he implies knowledge of Dusty's brother, who vanished two years ago. When she realizes he's calling from a nearby park, she tracks him through the snow until his footsteps disappear. People across the country have seen this boy, and vigilantes pursue him for alleged rape; he may be made of snow or fire, and he knows everyone's secrets. Dusty searches for the entrancing boy despite the townspeople's fury, her father's distress and her own instinctive feelings of peril. A dangerous, gleaming brightness (possibly the same metaphysical matter as the boy) threatens to transform Dusty into frigid fire. The enigmatic whirl of events ends with a blend of closure and persevering questions; readers who liked Firmament (2004) but found Apocalypse (2005) too cryptic will want to return to Bowler for this one. (Fantasy. YA)
School Library JournalGr 9 Up-"I'm sorry, little Dusty. Good-bye, little Dusty." These words, spoken by a stranger on a cell phone, are the same ones uttered by the British teen's brother before he disappeared. The boy on the phone claims he has overdosed and is dying. Dusty walks out into the snow to find him and enters into a supernatural puzzle beyond her imagination. She follows his snowy footprints to a place where they inexplicably vanish, but not long afterward, she learns he has not died. She soon finds herself pursued by vigilantes who are also looking for this boy. They claim he has abnormally snow-white skin and hair and is responsible for a number of reprehensible crimes. Dusty, convinced that he knows something about her brother, refuses to give him up to the mob before he reveals his secrets. Dusty is a bitter tomboy with many disagreeable characteristics, yet readers will find themselves rooting for her. The rest of the characters are flat. The mystery is creepy and compelling, and readers will want to know more. Unfortunately, that which is revealed is surface level, and the deeper mystery remains unsolved. Copious pages of dialogue thrust the story forward and will appeal to many readers; however, interpreting what has happened will take more effort than most teens will be willing to expend. Heather M. Campbell, formerly at Philip S. Miller Library, Castle Rock, CO
Voice of Youth AdvocatesOn a snowy night in rural Britain, fifteen-year-old Dusty receives a telephone call from a strange boy who knows details about Dusty's life, including the name of her older brother, Josh, who has been missing for two years. Dusty is determined to find the boy and question him about Josh. In the meantime, rumors about a mysterious young rapist are flying around town, with a vigilante group seeking revenge. They believe that Dusty is hiding him, and they stalk her, trying to frighten her into giving him up. Dusty senses that the boy is otherworldly, is not convinced that he is a rapist, and wants to protect him at least long enough to find out what he knows about Josh. In the end, the boy's body is exposed to an angry mob, revealing the fact that he has no genitals. He then magically disappears after driving into a lake. When Josh's body is found under the submerged car, Dusty realizes that Josh committed the rape and then drowned himself. Bowler creates an unsettling mood in this novel, which opens with an excruciatingly tense situation but then moves rather slowly. Set against a lonely winter landscape, this weird story will be savored by both fantasy and suspense readers. The fact that Bowler never reveals the identity or motive of the mysterious boy is slightly disappointing, and it is somewhat difficult to connect with his characters, but he spins a good tale nonetheless.-Dotsy Harland.
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Wilson's High School Catalog
Dusty’s life has fallen apart. Her mother left after Dusty’s brother mysteriously disappeared, and her father is devastated. Then Dusty gets a seemingly random phone call: a boy’s voice saying, “I’m dying.” At first Dusty doesn’t care, but then the boy says things that only Dusty knows. Things that lead her to believe he knows where her brother is. And after a few more calls, Dusty wants to find this boy, but he doesn’t want to be found. He claims he is too dangerous, and there are many people who agree. Can Dusty avoid getting hurt and still protect this mysterious boy who may not be of this world?
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