Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
Stacy, 17, awakens from the coma she's been in for four years, following a gunshot wound, and finds her world is drastically altered. The shooting incident that injured her also killed her mother. Her older sister is married and pregnant. Hairstyles, clothing and friends have changed. Stacy, if her memory returns, can put the man who shot her and murdered her mother behind bars. Soon every face she sees looks both familiar and strange, and the attention of a boy named Jeff is welcomed and feared. Because of press reports, the murderer knows that Stacy can find him. She's afraid she's being watched. And when her memory and the truth about the killer come back to her, Stacy faces the darker side of herself. The compelling premise of Stacy's lost years and Nixon's mastery of suspense are gripping. But readers want to know more about Stacy's adjustment; there is no real period of mourning for her mother, and the ending leaves unresolved issues. (12-up)
School Library Journal
Gr 7-10 Awakening from a four-year coma, Stacy learns that the intruder who shot her also killed her mother, and that she was the only witness. Stacy has to come to terms with her new identity: physically a 17 year old, yet mentally still a 13 year old, she has missed four years of growing up and of popular culture. At the same time, she realizes that she has to identify the killer before he can silence her. Stacy is a vivid character whose need to be brought up to date provides some comic moments, such as her confusion at new hair styles and her unfamiliarity with pasta salad. While this mystery is generally tense and dramatic, the first-person narrative does remove the edge from some of the suspense. One other weakness is Stacy's love interest, a narcotics officer masquerading as a high-school senior. Nixon does not convince readers that this 23-year-old man would fall in love with someone who in so many ways thinks and acts like a 13 year old. Yet the clever premise, the quick pace, and the determined protagonist should attract and hold readers. David Gale, ``School Library Journal''
JUN/JUL 01 - AudioFile
Thirteen-year-old Stacy is sunbathing when she hears a noise; turning, she sees a man with a gun, then everything goes black. Four years later, she wakes up in a hospital bed with no memory of what happened. Now she's 17 with a lot of time to catch up on, and she needs to grow up fast. The killer is still out there, hoping she can't remember who killed her mother and tried to kill her. Is it the new guy in school who seems to have fallen for her? Or one of her old friends? Christina Moore is a pro; she builds the tension throughout, making Stacy a brave heroine fighting confusion and terror. She pulls us along, gamely opening each new door to a dark room, while at the same time making our hearts pound with the urge to shout, "Don't go in there!" D.G. © AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine