Commended, Kirkus Reviews Best Children's Books: Historical Fiction
It's September 1963 when Rex is blindsided by some unexpected news. His family is moving again -- just to the other side of the city, as it turns out, but it might as well be the other side of the moon as far as Rex is concerned. In desperation, he secretly starts taking public transit back to his old school -- a plan that works just fine until he runs out of money.
When his sister Annie catches him stealing change from his mum's purse, sisterly blackmail becomes another problem. Not only that, but Rex has got on the bad side of Spew, the hockey thug bully from his old school, and Spew and his sidekicks Puke and Dribble are out to get Rex -- and they know where he lives. Rex ends up using his wits and lively imagination to get himself out of his pickle, with some sobering and surprising consequences.
Tim Wynne-Jones is one of Canada's foremost writers for children. The author of over thirty-five books, he is a two-time winner of the Governor General's Award, as well as a two-time winner of the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award and of the Arthur Ellis Award. His short-story collections include Some of the Kinder Planets, Book of Changes and Lord of the Fries. He is also known for his Rex Zero series. Recently, he wrote the young-adult novels The Ruinous Sweep; Emperor of Any Place, which earned seven starred reviews; and Blink & Caution, which won the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award. Tim is also the recipient of the Edgar Award and the Vicky Metcalf Award for a Body of Work. In 2012, he was made an Officer to the Order of Canada. He lives in Perth, Ontario.
...funny, wise and true...Wynne Jones is a dab hand at depicting the bizarre logic and comfortable strangeness of family...
...an entertaining picaresque tale of what life might have been like for a particularly imaginative every-boy in Ottawa nearly a half a century ago.
...shot through with affectionate humour...[The Rex Zero series] are Canadian Classics, recommended for youth and adults alike...Wynne-Jones depicts the mayhem that is family life and growing up with comic spirit and ebullient vigour...has the gift of using plaing short words in an extraordinary way, jolting into life the slightest of details with little words...often hilarious...
Genuinely wholesome, packed with affectionate humor, tension and joy.
Perfect pacing, brilliant dialogue and characterization, and a hero of whom almost anyone would want to be a friend are just a few of Wynne Jones's trademarks as a novelist, and The Great Pretender wears all of them in full fig.
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