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The Boy on the Bus

The Boy on the Bus
A Novel  
This edition: Trade Paperback, 224 pages
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Description

Meg Landry expected it to be a day like any other -- her asthmatic eight-year-old son would step off the bus, home from school. But on this day, the boy on the bus is not Meg's son -- or at least doesn't appear to be. This new boy shares Charlie's copper hair, tea-brown eyes, and slight frame. But there is something profoundly, if indefinably, different about him. He has a finer nose, his skin is shinier, and his face looks more mature, as if he has grown into being Charlie more than the real Charlie ever had.

In the wake of Meg's quiet alarm, her far-flung family returns home, and a jangly unease sets in. Neither Charlie's father, Jeff, nor Charlie's rebellious teenage sister, Katie, can help Meg settle the question of the boy. They look to her for certainty -- after all, shouldn't a mother know her own child?

In this daring novel, Deborah Schupack dissects a family stretched out along the seams of postmodern small-town life. With the precision of a literary wordsmith, Schupack has crafted an extraordinary tale of a mother's love for her son and a mystery that may ultimately rip them apart. Tense and atmospheric, this debut is a rare combination of intellectual sophistication and page-turning suspense.

Paula Fox Author of Borrowed Finery As distinctive, original, and mysterious a story as Lewis Carroll's Alice Through the Looking Glass, The Boy on the Bus mixes the usual with the unusual, the ordinary with the extraordinary.
Haven Kimmel Author of The Solace of Leaving Early and A Girl Named Zippy Taut, spooky, and elegant. Deborah Schupack writes with masterful authority.
Kathryn Davis Author of Versailles Deborah Schupack makes us look through the seductively bright lens of her prose into a world both familiar and strange, that uncanny place at the heart of every family where the deepest bonds get forged. Utterly original and truly mysterious
-- this is a spellbinding debut!
Howard Norman Author of The Haunting of L. The Boy on the Bus is a hypnotic and wonderful novel, unsettling, boldly imaginative, and fearless in its depiction of how the familiar can suddenly become unfamiliar and life is indelibly altered. Deborah Schupack is (my greatest praise) a highly unconventional writer
-- and brilliant.
Kirkus Reviews With this unexpectedly impressive debut novel of psychological mystery, Schupack boldly announces her presence at the table of writers who deserve to be heard.