Colin Fischer is the new detective in town. Hercule Poirot, Sherlock
Holmes, Monk or Colombo are merely his predecessors. Beside the
detective side, these characters have another thing in common: the
inability (or a low developed ability, at least) to interact normally
with the people around them. Like them, Colin Fischer has his own way of
dealing with the surrounding world: he retracts, he observes, he
calculates in mathematical manner everything, and then he draws
conclusions.
He is not presented as a detective in the first place. You would
actually think this is a teenager’s book, like those books with
adolescents and their school behavior. Yet, the book offers this
surprise: the character is slowly showing signs of being a detective
prodigy. Unlike the previously mentioned characters, he is first a
school boy, then a person that suffers from “Asperger’s syndrome” (a ”neurological condition related to autism”) and only at the end his detective skills will come out.
The first two things that he is, put Colin in a very delicate
position towards everything around him: his colleagues that play tricks
on him and torture him in the cruel way that the college boys know how,
his teachers that are dazzled by his behavior but eventually get to
respect him on knowledge basis, his parents that love him in an almost
unnatural way, putting aside any parent-like deception that could be
considered a logical reaction that someone with an Asperger’s syndrome
affected kid would be likely to manifest. While the last one, his
detective skills, get him into a whole lot of trouble, but get him out
of it too.
The instruments he uses are instruments that any detective would use:
a pen – a green one – and a notebook. But these are also the
instruments that any kid would use to write down the things that
happened during the day: they are called “journals”. He misses the hat
or the trench, so the reader will be misled in the beginning. He might
even wonder: “Is this a book about a boy that suffers from mental
problems related to autism?” Well, the answer is: “Be patient! You have
in your hands a very good book that treats different issues in a very
detailed and sensitive way.”
Even though Colin Fischer barks like a dog as a reaction to the
disturbing phone that starts ringing while he is responding in class at a
teacher’s question, even though he reacts quite badly to the color that
he doesn’t like – blue, even though he avoids eye contact, when a gun
is shot in the cafeteria, he remains cool, he’s not afraid, and he
records every detail of the event as accurately as a video camera would.
And this is not because he is fond of guns or anything, but because
this shooting thing is an event that makes him curious. It’s an enigma
that sets him off. He is determined to find out who the gun belongs to
and who shot it.
Well, this determination is not like something that a normal kid
would experience. Maybe a normal kid would give up. Or maybe he would
ask for help from the closest of his friends. Yet, Colin does not give
up. And even if he is helped, he doesn’t ask for that help. He gets it
because it’s a natural thing that happens. Even more, he will attempt to
solve the mystery in order to help the one person that a normal kid
would be glad to see gone: his most feared enemy. And he does that only
based on the fact that his calculations have brought him to the
conclusion that he is not guilty.
The character Colin Fischer is a very well outlined one: after the
first few pages the reader will feel that he (or she) actually knows the
kid. In that “OK, OK, I got it!” manner. His relationship with his
parents is profiled in the best way possible on only one page: when he
comes home all wet, after being sunk in the toilet by a senior, and his
father asks for ”!!the story Colin thinks the ”I got wet”
explanation would cover it, as his father’s expectations were strictly
related to the water dripping off his shirt and not to the event that
caused that dripping. The same thing with his colleagues, that are
either laughing because of the way he is, or picking on him. And also
the relation with the teachers: the gym teacher explains him how to
visualize the throwing of the basketball, and Colin throws a perfect
three point. He then asks the teacher: ”Mr. Turrentine, are you God?” “No, Fischer. I am a gym teacher. I work for a living”, the gym teacher replies”!!.
There is an amazing achievement in the book: even though Colin
Fischer’s character is so well constructed, the others are viewed
through Colin’s eyes, so they are outlined in a different way. They are
simply points in his existence, some brighter then the others, each
having own trajectory that Colin cannot modify, and everyone being
accepted for exactly what it is – a point that the main character has to
interact to. Only when that point modifies something in his own
intimate world – that doesn’t have to be modified at all – only then
will Colin take a stand in his own way.
The whole detective story keeps the same line as any detective story
would. The character keeps gathering clues throughout the entire book,
and then, at the end, an abrupt presentation explains every mystery that
occurred before. Colin does just that: he observes, he evaluates, he
takes some decisions – unexplained to the reader at the time – and then,
in the end, at the climax of the epic story, the mystery is broken
piece by piece and explained thoroughly.
The authors, Ashley Edward Miller and Zack Stentz, met online while discussing Star Trek, a passion they both share. They are the writers of the scripts for X-Men: First Class and Thor. They plan, among other things, to write a remake of Starship
Troopers. With the success of these movies – and of some one hundred or
so hours of other television shows – I personally think it would
actually be a great idea to get this book on the big screen, as well. I
think it would make a great movie.
The live style, the rich details that help create a very
distinguished character, will make this book a pleasant reading
experience.
Do you like the mystery unraveling stories but got a bit bored of the old Sherlock Holmes stuff? Well, Colin Fischer is the book for you.
The publisher of the book is Penguin Books
ISBN: 978-0-141-34399-0

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