A nerdy teen loses control of an out-of-this-world lie.
Sixteen-year-old Gideon Hofstadt has predicted his future: college at MIT, career at NASA, and, somewhere along the way, a discovery that forever alters human knowledge. For now, he’s vying to graduate as valedictorian and running a backyard laboratory on his family’s ancestral Lansburg, Pennsylvania, farm. When Gideon rigs an explosion to test a homemade seismograph, his goofball brother Ishmael’s interference results in a blast larger than either anticipated. Under interrogation, Ishmael ad-libs, eventually alleging extraterrestrial visitation—and, shockingly, people buy it. The astonished brothers watch as the prank takes on a life of its own with townspeople, ufologists, and media contributing otherworldly additions to the hoax. Though pacing occasionally sags, Gideon’s first-person confessional is buoyed by deadpan humor and interstitial text messages, interviews, blog posts, and news articles. Things finally grow dangerous when J. Quincy Oswald, the predatory con man behind a multilevel marketing scheme, decides Lansburg is the perfect launch site for a phony immortality elixir. Gideon’s struggles—with introversion and insecurity; commitment issues with his boyfriend, Owen; and habitual mistreatment of his friend Arden—complement this central narrative tension. Can Gideon come clean while his life is still worth salvaging? Or has he ultimately conned himself? Excepting Gideon’s best friend, Cassidy, who is black, all characters are assumed white.
A balanced exploration of maturity, vulnerability, human connection, and our innate desire to believe.
(Fiction. 14-18)