ONE MISTAKE. ONE BAD NIGHT. ONE TOO MANY DRINKS. A powerful and heartbreaking debut novel about a guy who had it all...until he drank that fifth beer and got into the car. Frank Marder is a head, paralyzed from the neck down, and it's his fault. He was drinking. He was driving. Now Frank can't walk, he can't move, he can't feel his skin. He needs someone to feed him, to wash him, to move his body. But if you ask most of the people who are posting onwww.quadkingonthenet, he hasn't been adequately punished. Two people are dead because of him. Frank should go to jail. Only "Annonymous" disagrees.
Great read. Makes you realize what ones persons actions can cause and the good and bad that can result from those actions.
A Moving Story
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Sarah Aronson's book was painful to read at times but I'm so glad I did read it. Although it is written mainly for teens, most adults would be touched by this story of a good person living with the tragic consequences of a bad mistake. The ending really got to me - it was the definition of bittersweet.
A stark cautionary tale
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
I have to say that it's quite different to read a book when you personally know the author. First, as I was reading, I heard the words in the author's voice. Second, I knew of some of the events that must have inspired certain scenes in the book, and wondered how other scenes were conceived. "Head Case," is about the harsh reality of a teenage boy, Frank, who very unfortunately drives drunk with his girlfriend, and gets into an accident with dire consequences. Not only does he have to spend the rest of his life as a quadriplegic, but must also live with the guilt of killing two people. While the book takes place over a relatively short period of time, the reader understands that Frank, completely dependent on those around him, will have to live with his mistake forever, as will his parents. The incredible hardships are difficult and painful to imagine, but even someone in Frank's nightmarish predicament can make a positive contribution to society. So, ultimately, the book is about redemption, together with serving as a cautionary tale. It will be personally exciting for me to see Sarah Aronson's future work which, perhaps, might deal with less bleak subjects. "Head Case" is a very promising start.
Powerful, emotional, wrenchingly honest
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Head Case is more than an examination of a tragically imprisoned paraplegic. Despite what the author states on the book's jacket, she does indeed take the reader inside a young man's tortured mind and the reader temporarily occupies the chair in which the boy (Frank) is permanently welded. It is gut wrenching and emotional. Just as a white man can never really know what it is to be black, so none of us can truly understand the hell in which people like Frank exist. We can pity and encourage and smile in their faces, but we can never feel what it's like to be unable to feel. Sarah Aronson accomplishes the impossible. And all the while she rivets our attention as Frank struggles to live in a world which doesn't understand, is quick to blame, and anxious to condemn. The last page of the book (with a totally unexpected surprise) jolts the reader into an awareness that the simplest yet most powerful tools in the human arsenal remain compassion and love. It's a difficult book to put down, and one that will live with the reader a long long time.
Courtesy of Teens Read Too
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Frank Marder lost control. First of his car, then of his body. Now he's stuck -- trapped inside a body that's failed him. He can't move his legs. He can't move his arms. As a "head," it seems all Frank can do is think. Unfortunately, thinking is the last thing a guy who killed two people wants to do. HEAD CASE follows the post-rehab life of a quadriplegic in his first weeks home after a devastating drunk driving accident resulting in the death of his girlfriend and of a man he'd never met. Frank not only has to deal with the fact that he'll never walk or feed himself again, but that the whole town hates him and thinks he should be in jail. Little do they know, he already is. A scary, thought-provoking glimpse at life without control. Reviewed by: Julie M. Prince
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