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Editorial Content for Just a Regular Boy

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Reviewer (text)

Pamela Kramer

With her latest introspective novel, JUST A REGULAR BOY, Catherine Ryan Hyde takes us on a journey that we'd never imagine taking ourselves --- going with a survivalist and his five-year-old son into the wilds of northern Idaho to survive what he believes is a coming apocalypse.

Watching vicariously as Roy drives Remy away from everything he's ever known and loved --- including his best friend, Lester --- we feel Remy's fear, and our heart breaks for him. He’s frustrated because he can't call Lester (no cell service) or write him (no mailboxes). So he asks his father what they do have at this place they are approaching. Roy heartlessly explains, "Son, up there in our new home, we'll have the most important thing a person can have: freedom."

"The story is beautifully conceived and executed and incredibly touching. As with all of Hyde's characters, we really come to empathize with Remy and Anne."

Apparently that freedom extends to Remy not being treated as a child. Roy says that they are equal, and Remy should not call him "Dad." As most of us know, five-year-olds do not care about equality; they want, more than anything, to feel safe and loved. Remy feels neither of these essentials in this new place they are calling home. In their tiny cabin, which is the size of a one-car garage, there is only room for bunk beds and a wood stove.

Roy is basically a cruel man. When Remy is inspecting a creek near their home, watching the fish, he leans over to drink the water. Roy frightens him, so he falls into the freezing water as his father laughs. That's the beginning of Remy's "instruction." Roy doesn't teach him mathematics or how to read and write. He teaches Remy about the evil of man and that he should be afraid of all other people, because they will want to kill him.

But Remy also sees that his father isn’t all-knowing and hasn't prepared for everything. Soon after their move, Remy outgrows his shoes. Roy never thought to buy extras in larger sizes. So he goes barefoot. In the winter, he wears layers of socks with plastic bags over his feet. But even when his father does make a supply run in their early years there, he doesn't buy Remy shoes. Yet he always seems to have cigarettes handy.

A year later, there is a wildfire, and the smoke causes Roy to believe that the "thing" he fears has begun. Remy walks to the road, which his father had told him not to do, and finds out it's "only" a forest fire. While Roy believes his paranoid fantasies, Remy isn't quite sold on that idea. Another year or so later, we watch in horror as Remy falls from a tree, breaking his ribs, when trying to recover their last fishing hook. In spite of his extreme pain, he knows that he needs to buck up and conceal his injuries because his father won't care. Even though they are running out of food and have no fishing hooks left, Roy refuses to go for supplies, claiming that there might not be any. Then he disappears.

By now, Remy has spent years listening to his father tell him how dangerous strangers are. He believes they will kill him, but he is also in danger of starving. There are difficult decisions that this child (he doesn't know how old he is --- perhaps eight or nine?) must make.

There is another important character here, although as the title might suggest, Remy is the center of the story. Through sections of the book titled "Remy" and "Anne," we learn about each of them. Anne is married and has two children, both of whom she and her husband, Chris, adopted after fostering. Chris does not want any more foster kids, but Anne feels the need to help another child. When she hears about a possible foster child who is literally living in the wild and has not been caught yet, she becomes determined to help him.

Both Remy and Anne have trauma in their past that together they will begin to understand and overcome. At the same time, the whole family is forced to consider the fear that infects the survivalists and wonder if that fear is perhaps not completely misplaced. How much weight do we put on our fears of the possibility of civil war in this country? That a crazed shooter will show up at our school, library, synagogue, church or shopping center? That a new virus will kill us? Do we allow those fears to incapacitate us?

The story is beautifully conceived and executed and incredibly touching. As with all of Hyde's characters, we really come to empathize with Remy and Anne. And as much as we want them to have a happily ever after, we've also been forced to confront the very real possibility that such a future is not for them. We do live in a world of mass shootings, car crashes, COVID and other events that cause premature deaths --- yet most of us live as if we will continue on. As Remy learns, we need other people. We must face our fears and still live our lives to the fullest. Because to do otherwise is unthinkable.

Teaser

Raised off the grid in the middle of nowhere, Remy Blake is days shy of his eighth birthday when his survivalist father unexpectedly dies. As seasons pass, supplies run out, and fending for himself grows more desperate, Remy sets out on foot, unprepared for the great unknown of civilization. He is found --- near feral, silent and terrified --- in the small rural town of Blaire. To Anne, a nurturing mother of two adopted teenagers who’s still dealing with her own childhood rejections, Remy is not a lost cause. Just a challenging one. As Remy cautiously adapts to his new foster home, his family wants nothing more than to reassure him that he can trust the world. But to do so, they must first reexamine how much they trust the world themselves, and how much they should.

Promo

Raised off the grid in the middle of nowhere, Remy Blake is days shy of his eighth birthday when his survivalist father unexpectedly dies. As seasons pass, supplies run out, and fending for himself grows more desperate, Remy sets out on foot, unprepared for the great unknown of civilization. He is found --- near feral, silent and terrified --- in the small rural town of Blaire. To Anne, a nurturing mother of two adopted teenagers who’s still dealing with her own childhood rejections, Remy is not a lost cause. Just a challenging one. As Remy cautiously adapts to his new foster home, his family wants nothing more than to reassure him that he can trust the world. But to do so, they must first reexamine how much they trust the world themselves, and how much they should.

About the Book

An orphaned boy raised by a survivalist wends his way into the real world in an emotional novel about hope, fears and found family by New York Times bestselling author Catherine Ryan Hyde.

Out there is chaos, the collapse of society and so much to be afraid of. All that matters is freedom.

That’s what Remy Blake has been taught by his survivalist father. Raised off the grid in the middle of nowhere, his own survival skills not yet honed, Remy is days shy of his eighth birthday when his father unexpectedly dies. As seasons pass, supplies run out, and fending for himself grows more desperate, Remy sets out on foot, unprepared for the great unknown of civilization.

He is found --- near feral, silent and terrified --- in the small rural town of Blaire. To Anne, a nurturing mother of two adopted teenagers who’s still dealing with her own childhood rejections, Remy is not a lost cause. Just a challenging one. As Remy cautiously adapts to his new foster home, his family wants nothing more than to reassure him that he can trust the world. But to do so, they must first reexamine how much they trust the world themselves, and how much they should. As Remy’s journey into the real world begins, figuring out how to navigate it becomes a path they will have to learn to walk together.

Audiobook available, read by Michael Crouch and Kate Rudd