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Road of the Dead by Kevin Brooks
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Road of the Dead

by Kevin Brooks

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2371624,168 (3.78)1

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Reviewed by Karin Perry for TeensReadToo.com

Ruben knew exactly when it happened. He was sitting in the backseat of an old Mercedes in his family's salvage yard when the feeling came over him. Ruben often left his own body and could attach himself to others. He could sense their thoughts and emotions. This is what happened when he felt his sister, Rachel, get attacked and murdered. He knew exactly the moment Rachel's life was taken from her.

Even though he knew it had happened and knew that the Dead Man killed her, Ruben didn't say anything to his family. He hoped he might be wrong. He realized he wasn't when the police contacted the family. The details were simple: Rachel, nineteen years old, was visiting an old school friend in the small village of Lychcombe on Dartmoor. After her visit was over, she left and made her way toward London to return home, but never made it. Her body was found the following morning, strangled, raped, and battered.

The most important thing to the family was to get her back. They wanted to bury her and put her to rest. After a trip to the police station to find out how long her body would be held, the family found out that the police would keep her until the case was closed; meaning the murderer had to be caught. The problem with that was, Ruben knew the murderer was already dead and buried and the case wouldn't be solved anytime soon.

Ruben's older brother, Cole, wasn't going to sit around and wait. He planned to go to the village to find out what happened himself and he planned to go alone. He didn't want his younger brother going along to worry about. Ruben knew what Cole was thinking, though, and his mother wanted him to go along to make sure Cole didn't get himself hurt. Cole's temper tended to get him in trouble. He took after his gypsy, bare-knuckle fighter father who was sentenced to a prison term for killing someone.

Even though their mother was worried about Ruben and Cole going away to look into the murder, no one could foresee the trouble in store for them once they started digging into Rachel's murder. As soon as they arrived in the village they knew they weren't welcome. Secrets were everywhere and no one wanted them to be dug up. Secrets that involved the entire village. Secrets that would lead them to pain, torture, death, and eventually the truth.

Kevin Brooks doesn't let us down. He has provided another heart-pounding, deeply emotional story with strong characters. THE ROAD OF THE DEAD is a great place to start if you haven't read any other books by this creative and unique author. ( )
  GeniusJen | Oct 12, 2009 |
Quick, compulsive read. Unfortunately, no zombies.
  nilchance | Jan 8, 2009 |
This book was about a boy and his brother and their journey to find out the events surrounding the death of their sister and to wreck havoc in the small town she died. ( )
  smrtmouth1992 | Nov 6, 2008 |
Ruben knew exactly when it happened. He was sitting in the backseat of an old Mercedes in his family's salvage yard when the feeling came over him. Ruben often left his own body and could attach himself to others. He could sense their thoughts and emotions. This is what happened when he felt his sister, Rachel, get attacked and murdered. He knew exactly the moment Rachel's life was taken from her. Even though he knew it had happened and knew the Dead Man killed her, Ruben didn't say anything to his family. He hoped he might be wrong. He realized he wasn't when the police contacted the family. The details were simple, Rachel, nineteen-years-old, was visiting an old school friend in the small village of Lychcombe on Dartmoor. After her visit was over, she left and made her way toward London to return home, but never made it. Her body was found the following morning strangled, raped, and battered. The most important thing to the family was to get her back. They wanted to bury her and put her to rest. After a trip to the police station to find out how long her body would be held, the family found out that the police would keep her until the case was closed; meaning the murderer had to be caught. The problem with that was, Ruben knew the murderer was already dead and buried and the case wouldn't be solved anytime soon. Ruben's older brother, Cole, wasn't going to sit around and wait. He planned to go to the village to find out what happened himself and he planned to go alone. He didn't want his younger brother going along to worry about. Ruben knew what Cole was thinking though and his mother wanted him going along to make sure Cole didn't get himself hurt. Cole's temper tended to get him in trouble. He took after his gypsy, bare-knuckle fighter father who was sentenced to a prison term for killing someone. Even though their mother was worried about Ruben and Cole going away to look into the murder, no one could foresee the trouble in store for them once they started digging into Rachel's murder. As soon as they arrived in the village they knew they weren't welcome. Secrets were everywhere and didn't want to be dug up. Secrets that involved the entire village. Secrets that would lead them to pain, torture, death, and eventually the truth. Kevin Brooks doesn't let us down. He has provides another heart-pounding, deeply emotional story with strong characters. THE ROAD OF THE DEAD is a great place to start if you haven't read any other books by this creative and unique author. ( )
  kperry | Oct 26, 2008 |
Brooks does a great job getting the reader inside the head of this character who can see so much from inside. You feel the creepiness of this town that is almost a character in itself. ( )
  GaylDasherSmith | Oct 19, 2008 |
Vivid descriptions

of brutality. Teen noir.

Gypsy boys solve crime. ( )
  librarianlk | Jul 12, 2008 |
loved the audio version ( )
  jellocke | Jun 2, 2008 |
it's a really good book. and not as disgusting as you think it's gonna be when yo read on the cover ( )
  Gnork | Apr 20, 2008 |
A haunting story about two brothers trying to find out who killed their sister. I normally do not like books with a lot of violence, but it fits with the story and the characters. ( )
  kaburns | Nov 12, 2007 |
The brilliant, evocative sense of place that Brooks established in his book, Lucas, returns to us in The Road of the Dead. Along with a fabulous setting, readers will discover well-rounded characters and a page-burning thriller. This is Brooks’ finest book to date. Ruben senses the death of his sister, Rachel and this surprises him. Normally Ruben is only tuned into his older brother Cole. Ruben and his brawling brother Cole journey onto the moors to track down a killer. Needless to say, this journey is fraught with danger for these two half gypsy boys. Readers will need seatbelts for this powerful and surprisingly lyrical story. Recommended for all high school libraries.

I can’t honestly recommend it because I did not finish it. Nothing really gripped me. I just couldn’t get into it – plain and simple. It is extremely well written and I can tell it’s most likely a great book, but I was chilled and couldn’t get very far. AHS/EK ( )
  edspicer | Nov 10, 2007 |
Ruben, age 14, can sense certian things from people. He sensed his sister's death before he knew about it. Now he and his brother Cole travel to the town where she was murdered in order to make sense of it all. Somewhat slow in places; the mystery part is intriguing. ( )
  ShellyPYA | Oct 9, 2007 |
Gr. 9-12. Fourteen-year-old Ruben Ford is sitting in his father's junkyard when he knows--knows--0 that his older sister, Rachel, has been raped and murdered. Perhaps it is his Gypsy blood that gives him second sight; Ruben can see and feel things others can't. He knows, for instance, that his ice-cold brother, Cole, is going to get into--and cause--trouble when he decides to go to desolate Dartmoor, where Rachel met her end. Brooks' great strength is his talent for intense description; he makes readers see, feel, and smell all that Ruben does--most of it coarse, disgusting, and ugly. The author uses an interesting technique to heighten that effect. Psychic Ruben can see things happening miles away, so Cole's battles with those responsible for Rachel's death are literally seen through Ruben's eyes. However, as in Kissing the Rain0 (2004), Brooks has trouble tying up loose ends. Thus, the question of how Cole comes upon a key piece of evidence is brushed away with Ruben's comment, "Does it matter?" Readers have sat through a lot of brutality (albeit strikingly written brutality) to get that information, so the answer is, well, yeah, it does.
  jpyzik | Sep 6, 2007 |
Editorial Reviews
Booklist (January 1, 2006 (Vol. 102, No. 9))
cpg1252 Gr. 9-12. Fourteen-year-old Ruben Ford is sitting in his father's junkyard when he knows--knows--that his older sister, Rachel, has been raped and murdered. Perhaps it is his Gypsy blood that gives him second sight; Ruben can see and feel things others can't. He knows, for instance, that his ice-cold brother, Cole, is going to get into--and cause--trouble when he decides to go to desolate Dartmoor, where Rachel met her end. Brooks' great strength is his talent for intense description; he makes readers see, feel, and smell all that Ruben does--most of it coarse, disgusting, and ugly. The author uses an interesting technique to heighten that effect. Psychic Ruben can see things happening miles away, so Cole's battles with those responsible for Rachel's death are literally seen through Ruben's eyes. However, as in Kissing the Rain (2004), Brooks has trouble tying up loose ends. Thus, the question of how Cole comes upon a key piece of evidence is brushed away with Ruben's comment, "Does it matter?" Readers have sat through a lot of brutality (albeit strikingly written brutality) to get that information, so the answer is, well, yeah, it does.

Horn Book (May/June, 2006)
Fourteen-year-old British, half-gypsy Ruben often knows the thoughts of others, mainly his family, especially his brother, Cole -- but never his older sister, Rachel. So he's perplexed and frightened when, one stormy night, he finds himself psychically witnessing someone raping and killing Rachel. When the investigation into her murder seems to stall, Ruben and Cole head off to the country town where Rachel had been staying. Though they are met with opposition because they are "half-breeds" and outsiders, the brothers slowly chip away at the secrets of Lychcombe on Dartmoor. Once they put together the pieces of the crime, including conspiracy and mistaken identity, their job is only half over. Brooks succeeds on every level with this enthralling mystery/thriller that will keep readers turning pages well past bedtime. The descriptions are poetic, and the dialogue is lyrical but realistic. Readers who can accept the premise of the psychic gypsy boy will easily lose themselves and set off in search of Brooks's previous novels, if they are not fans already.

Horn Book starred (Fall 2006)
Fourteen-year-old British, half-gypsy Ruben is frightened when he finds himself psychically witnessing someone raping and killing his sister. When the murder investigation stalls, Ruben and his brother attempt to put together the pieces of the crime themselves. The enthralling mystery/thriller will keep readers turning pages well past bedtime. Brooks's descriptions are poetic, and the dialogue is lyrical but realistic.

Kirkus Review (February 1, 2006)
"When the Dead Man got Rachel I was sitting in the back of a wrecked Mercedes wondering if the rain was going to stop." So it is that 14-year-old Ruben, who can read minds, vicariously witnesses his sister's murder. He and his older brother Cole travel to a desolate village in search of the killer, so that the coroner will release the body for burial. What follows is suspenseful and ultimately violent-though filtered through Ruben's nonviolent perspective. The brothers' relationship develops through the action, in Brooks's signature poetic prose and humorous banter: "I need to know what you're thinking sometimes." "You know what I'm thinking." "I need to hear it." . . . "You want to know what I'm thinking?" . . . "Yeah." . . . "I need to go to the bathroom . . . that's what I'm thinking." "I knew that," I told him. "I thought you might." "I knew that too." Fans of Brooks's Martyn Pig, Kissing the Rain, Candy and Lucas, won't be disappointed by this thrilling, gritty story and it's memorable, heart-breaking characters. (Fiction. YA)

Library Media Connection (October 2006)
This is a highly suspenseful thriller set in Britain. The London family of Cole and Ruben was ripped apart by the imprisonment of their father for killing a man in a bare-knuckle prize fight, even before their 19-year-old sister, Rachel, was found raped and murdered. 14-year-old Ruben who has the ability to tune in to the thoughts of his older siblings tells the story. His older brother, Cole, is remote with a short fuse. Ruben and Cole set out to find Rachel's killer in order to get her body back to bury. There are violent types in abundance, craziness, mind reading, gypsy relatives, and plenty of motivation for murder as Ruben and Cole investigate their sister's death. It seems that the whole countryside is fighting them, and as the boys come to depend upon each other, they learn new respect for each other, including understanding and even love. It's hard to put this novel down. Recommended. Barbara Foraker, Librarian, Cherokee High School, Rogersville, Tennessee

Publishers Weekly (April 2, 2007)
According to PW's starred review, this bleak yet romantic tale about two brothers searching for their sister's murderer "is a whirlwind ride for the right reader, full of singular protagonists and downright scary villains." Ages 12-up. (Mar.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.

Publishers Weekly (February 27, 2006)
With the same hint of supernatural overtones as his Lucas, Brooks's latest novel grabs and holds readers' attention from its very first chapter, in which narrator Ruben Ford, who possesses a form of second sight, senses his sister Rachel's murder on a desolate moor. Determined to find Rachel's killer so her body can be released from the coroner's office and returned home for burial, Ruben, 14, and his 17-year-old brother, the streetwise fighter Cole, travel from their London home to the tiny, dying town of Lychcombe. There, the boys find hostile, loutish villagers bent on covering up the festering corruption that lies at the town's core-and the root cause of Rachel's rape and death. The boys' investigation sets off a series of beatings, confrontations and kidnappings. Although some of the violence takes place off stage, enough of it unfolds in such detail that squeamish readers may find themselves skimming over certain passages. These grim goings-on provide a setting that highlights the narrative's fragments of haunting beauty: Ruben's connection to the Dartmoor countryside and Cole's unexpected attraction to a gypsy girl. Subplots about the Fords' own partial gypsy lineage and the mythic aura of the moor serve to heighten the suspense. Peopled with singular protagonists and downright scary villains, this bleak-yet-romantic tale is a whirlwind ride for the right reader. Ages 12-up. (Mar.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

School Library Journal (April 1, 2006)
Gr 9 Up-Ruben Ford, 14, feels things. When his sister is murdered on the English moors, he knows she's dead even though he's home in London. He and his brother, Cole, 17, are freakishly linked by Ruben's power to feel what Cole feels. The teens travel to Dartmoor to find Rachel's killer and bring her body home. They're received by a Dickensian assortment of sadistic thugs, greasy criminals, and corrupt cops, all hiding something. Brooks's feel for mood and setting is as masterful here as in his taut, noir Martyn Pig (Scholastic, 2002). A haunting, tense drama builds from the first line and only lets up for scenes of brutal, vivid violence that bring readers back down to earth. The murder is all but solved by the second half of the book, and the pace falters a bit as the resolution becomes obvious. However, Brooks sustains a mythical aura throughout, and rapid-fire action should keep teens engrossed. Ruben is vintage Brooks: sensitive, strange, and wholly three-dimensional. The dialogue between the brothers is crisp and natural, and often funny and touching at once. Cole is perfectly drawn as Ruben's tough, detached counterbalance. Brooks shows that the real magic between the brothers is their ferocious love for one another, and he does so brilliantly.-Johanna Lewis, New York Public Library Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information. ( )
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  campbejj | Jul 3, 2007 |
"One moment she was with me--sitting in the back of the Mercedes, looking around the yard--and then the moment suddenly cracked and I was with her, walking a storm-ravaged lane in the middle of a desolate moor. We were cold and wet and tired and scared, and the world was black and empty, and I didn't know why."

When Rueben's sister Rachel is murdered far from home, Rueben knows about it immediately. In fact, due to his psychic abilities, Rueben feels as if he had been there with her. When the police refuse to return Rachel's body to her family until the crime is solved, Rueben and his older brother Cole set off to solve the crime themselves. The more clues they uncover, the stranger the mystery gets. Kevin Brooks uses poetic language to tell his page-turning story. All of the loose ends seem to tie up a bit too quickly in the end, but the book is still well-worth the read.

Request this title from Howard County Library http://tinyurl.com/yrcdta ( )
  georgek | May 10, 2007 |
I thought this book had a lot of potential, but just sort of puttered out. I liked the characters, but it wasn't enough. we never "meet" the girl who dies... so it doesn't really bother you. They go on and on about the main boy's "power" of being "with" someone... and then later on in the book, a couple of other characters are "with" someone. It's completely stupid. Plus you never find out how they get the body of the killer. There is also a lot of gratuitous violence. ( )
  4sarad | Apr 25, 2007 |
Ruben Ford has always felt things. Other people's thoughts, other people's feelings... It makes him different, but he's never minded it, really. Until the night he's alone in the backseat of a car in the rain, and alone in the dark on a deserted moor with his sister Rachel, about to be dead.

The police don't seem to know what they're doing when it comes to investigating Rachel's death. Ruben's brother, Cole, has taken to assaulting the press, and his mother just wants to be able to bury her daughter. With their father in jail, the boys knows it's up to them.

Cole sets his mind to going out to where it all happened, and following in Rachel's footsteps. Ruben sets his mind on going with him, with or without Cole's approval. Along the way they uncover a great deal--about themselves, about their past, about life, and the conspiracy of events into the middle of which their sister just happened to fall. ( )
  TechiMi | Jul 24, 2006 |
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