From the author of Restart , the story of two boys who are losing their memories... to each other. Reef and Theo don't know what's happening to them. They'll be going about their days and then suddenly they'll have these strange flashes of memory -- but the memories don't belong to them. And at the same time, their own memories are starting to... vanish. For Reef, this is a big problem, because memories are all he has left of his mom. For Theo, it's strange because the new memories give him a freedom he doesn't have with his domineering dad.
Gordon Korman is a Canadian author of children's and young adult fiction books. Korman's books have sold more than 30 million copies worldwide over a career spanning four decades and have appeared at number one on The New York Times Best Seller list.
“You do a lot of remembering when memories are all you’ve got.�
It's a surreal feeling to read a latest book by an author that you grew up reading, and having him write a story like Mixed Up, which includes Covid as one of the plot's integral points. It made me sit back and think about the days when I first stumbled across his books in our school library's junior fiction shelves, the memories of checking out his books - alongside the many other books that threatened to exceed each student's limit. 😅
“Memory: the mental process of registering, storing, and retrieving information.�
Ah, memories - who would we be without them? Who would be without remembering the people and moments that made up our lives - proved our existence - shared our experiences? How would it feel if one day you woke up and you didn't have them? Couldn't remember your way home? Your child's birth? Your wedding day? Your graduation? Your last birthday party? What if you couldn't remember the face of the one person who matters to you the most - memories so very precious because you know, there will never be a chance in the future for you to make more memories of them? 😟
What would you do then?
For twelve-year-old Reef Moody - the memory of his mother is the one thing he cannot afford to forget - because he'll never get a chance to make more memories with her. It's not only that fear that he's losing her - it's feeling like an unwelcome burden as he has to live with his mother's best friend's family - it's enduring her fourteen-year-old son's relentless torments and bullying, it's the heavy painful guilt that weighs upon his heart, that he holds himself responsible for bringing the Covid virus home and making him and his mother susceptible to it. 😔 And it's that desperate horrified anger that it's not that he's forgetting his memories - it's that he's losing them - that someone else is stealing all the memories of his life - and replacing them with his own. Enter Theo Metzinger.
“It’s frustrating not to be able to remember � especially since I remember so many things I would love to forget. Like what happened to Mom, and the reason why I’m all alone in the world.
Too bad you don’t get to pick what you remember.�
I was really glad that Reed and Theo didn't become best friends right off the bat? I mean, can you blame them? Someone else living with the memories of what defined you - recalling the instances that you treasured - that feeling of frustration and indignation of being so helpless to it - yeah, I wouldn't like it either. And while they are connected 'by a phenomenon that, as far as we know, has never happened to anybody else in the history of the world', they have their own share of personal problems that they have to endure. 🥺 Theo, riddled by the disappointment he feels for not living up to his father's expectations, Reed, forever carrying the guilt of not only being indirectly responsible for his mother's death, but now forgetting her, as well - 'What kind of monster forgets his poor dead mother?'
His grief was not palpable - it was tangible - in the way, that he so fiercely fought to preserve any lingering remnant of her existence - be it a photo or a phone recording - he couldn't even visit her in the hospital, due to the Covid regulations. But, it's through a well-balanced pacing in the story, that we get this believable build-up of anticipation as the two of them eventually were brought into each other's orbit and the realization that their memories were crossing over. 🙏🏻🙏🏻
While they try to find ways to figure out what could be the potential cause for their unfortunate situation, I liked how the author was able to weave some closure to their own personal problems. Admittedly, Reed's bullying issue was resolved a bit underwhelming, but with the same skillful manner of what being kids is all about - taking a risk and a chance to do what's right. And despite Reed's reluctance to befriend Theo, I liked how their friendship steadily grew - as they learned how much more they have in common than they realize - how they related to each other's memories, Theo, especially.
The few glimpses he had to Reed's life were so heart-breaking - a witness to 'a memory of the worst day of somebody’s life', the realization that Reed is a lot worse of than he is - that 'my life may not be perfect, but I’ve never been stuck in a lose-lose situation like that. 😢 There is always that subtle hint of compassion and understanding that resonates in GK's writing - one that you see the growth in the characters as we get closer to the ending - wondering how on earth they're going to figure out a plausible way out of this predicament.
“Some things that happen are so big you’re never the same afterward.�
But, not all is doom and gloom here - there are those brief instances that the author sneaks in the levity that makes me smile - that heartwarming feeling of making new friends and looking at the positive parts of your life. It's the little chuckle I let out when Theo's father comes to cheer on his daughter at her soccer match and Theo observes, 'I don’t know you,� I tell him as I sit down a good distance away.' We've all had those moments, haven't we? 😄 It's the soft recollection of Theo's mother when he inquires if there was anything special about the day he was born - some link that will help narrow down why he and Reed's memories are overlapping - with 'Of course,� Mrs. Metzinger replies with a big smile. “That was when I first became a mother. Nothing’s more special than that.' 🥰 It's the little things that stand out that even if it is a Middle Grade book - these are the books that even parents will appreciate the bond between a parent and their child and how much of our lives and our family members we should not take for granted. 🫂
And that ending... 💔💔 Gordon Korman, you broke my heart. I did not expect you to go down that route, but you did. Yes, I teared up - it was not fair � but life rarely is, isn't it? But, as you always do, you try to find the beauty and good that came out of it. 🥲 'Memory isn’t a total antidote to grief, but in a way, you can keep someone alive in your thoughts.' It may not have been the perfect ideal ending, but it was bittersweet and sadly, painfully real, but with enough hopeful promise for a hopeful future to savor the memories we still have and create new ones, in the years to come. ❤️🩹❤️�
Another amazing read from the masterful pen of Gordon Korman! I love reading Gordon Korman books, either by myself or with one or more of my children. This story just published in 2023 by Scholastic Canada, it is the 102 book published by Korman. And of the 32 I have read there has yet to be a dud. My introduction to Korman’s works, that I have a record of was the 39 Clues back in 2009. Since then I have read 32 of his books. With each one I read I am entertained and often challenged. My son often reads these books to me or with me. I picked up this to read the week it released. I have been bouncing back and forth between his oldest and most recent books, for the stand alone, and randomly with the series. I have been reading at the pace of about a book a week, so in a year and a half I should be caught up, depending on his current output.
The description of this volume is:
“Reef and Theo don't know what's happening to them. They'll be going about their days and then suddenly they'll have these strange flashes of memory -- but the memories don't belong to them. And at the same time, their own memories are starting to... vanish.
For Reef, this is a big problem, because memories are all he has left of his mom.
For Theo, it's strange because the new memories give him a freedom he doesn't have with his domineering dad.�
When I started first reading this story I had a hard time figuring out where it was going. I had not read the description or anything about it. But once I got going and it became clean I was blown away by how Korman handled the plot. The story is written in alternating chapters from the points of view of Reef Moody and Theo Metzinger. Both of them are experience a strange phenomenon. The boys have lived very different lives, but soon start having memories that they know are not their own. The two boys are trading memories and both are hunting to find out why. They need to know what caused this, and if their might be a way to undo it.
But life can get very complicated when you start forgetting things, especially, right at the beginning of an exam, or heading home late at night in a storm. The boys reach a point where desperation overrides common sense. Or even all sense at all. But if you are losing all your memories what else do you really have to lose?
The pace in this story is great. The characters are masterfully written. The story grabs a hold of you and just does not let go. This is another excellent read by Korman from Scholastic. A great read for middle grades and tweens. My son is 15 and loved it and I am in my fifties and thought it was excellent. A great read for the whole family, or for the classroom.
I liked it…but I didn’t love it. I think Restart has ruined me for all future Korman books! The fantasy aspect of this one reminded me a little too much of Back to the Future. It just wasn’t real. But I did appreciate the post-covid emotions about decisions and guilt. Totally enjoyable but Restart is such a tough act to follow.
So...yeah, I didn't enjoy this. I'm usually 100% a fan of Gordon Korman reads, and although I've found that his characters and narratives are rather similar/recycled in each of his books, that one unique aspect (in this case, memory-switching) that is the hook is enough to keep me interested enough to engage with the story. For the most part, the middle school tone he conjures up does seem to be genuine.
In this book however, it's like he mashed up all the uncomfortable parts of that age together and just...hoped readers would get something out of it.
For me, it wasn't gripping from the first few pages--which is what I'm used to from this author--and just seemed to go downhill the more I read from it. I mean, for instance, neither Reef nor Theo seem particularly likeable--more so Reef. He's sad because his mom died, which is understandable; but that doesn't explain why he's a total pushover and just lets Declan get away with everything short of (or maybe even including) murder. Like...it's not so much that he's treated like a charity case, but rather that he interprets that everyone else is treating him like a charity case, and all the times others are nice to him and whatnot is because of his mother passing away and her best friend's family sort-of taking him in. (By the way, did they ever officially adopt him, or is this a temp, gray-area type of situation or something?) But anyway, I just saw him as being too much of a pushover, and while he said that he's already too far gone so that he doesn't care about anything anymore, the author sure does present him as a "poor little orphan boy" character. I just didn't resonate with that.
As for Theo, I do think it's unusual to have a boy his age interested in gardening, but I thought that was refreshingly unique. What wasn't unique was the fact that he has an asshole father who wants him to "man up". Gah, that's just...so unoriginal. *cringes* Like...what would've been a cool idea is if Reef's life is bad, then make Theo's life really good, and maybe replace Theo's good memories with Reef's bad ones, such that each of them is getting a full taste of what it's like on the other side. (i.e. Reef feeling like he has a supportive father in direct contrast to how his real father was never in the picture. Just saying, that would've been a greater difference between the two characters, and far more engaging than giving them both problems to deal with!)
So...yeah, this one didn't do it for me, and that's unfortunate since it's one of Gordon Korman's more recent works.
This book was good, it was funny, it was sad. Reef bothered me a lot. He had a lot of only child to him, the way he put up with Declan and talked about his mom, and could t accept the fact that he had to share his moms face with another kid? He was a little too annoyed at literally everyone 24/7 for me to enjoy him as a character, and while I get it, his mom died, but like� wouldn’t you want someone to reach out and be your friend and help you with the memory thing? He was so against fixing it even though he complained about it and it’s like buddy, if u got a problem ur mom ain’t here anymore, go help this kid who wants to be your friend help you. Declan had great development but there were so many empty threats with him and Konrad I was just like, yeah tough stuff come get me? I also feel like much WASNT resolved with the parents. Or how his mom got actually sick�. Causeeeee if Portia had mono who’s to say he didn’t give his mom mono�. From Portia�.. Theo was a good character but I feel like his love of gardening which is half his personality had to be thrown aside for the sake of the plot, which was sad cause I really enjoyed it.
I love all Korman's books, but this one I was cheering for a different ending than he gave it. I wanted it all to be a "wizard of oz" moment, where he wakes up and none of that really happened. His mom still alive, his life returned as he remembered. But it wasn't so. A story where two young boys who've never met begin getting/losing their memories to one another, look for any reasonable answer as to why. As they find one another, life changes more than they could expect. It was a good, heartwarming book, but I wish Reef could have his own life back there at the end. Oh well.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Fresh take the on body-switching trope, mixed with genuine palpable emotion. Korman knows how to deliver to the middle-grade crowd without outright pandering. I have a great appreciation for his timing and delivery. The rabbit was great.
"Mixed Up" falls into the science fiction genre but is mostly still just realistic fiction. It presents the intriguing premise of two boys, Reef and Theo, inexplicably losing their memories to each other. The concept is captivating: they experience strange flashes of memories that don’t belong to them while their own memories start to disappear. For Reef, this is devastating because his memories of his mom are all he has left of her. For Theo, these new memories offer a sense of freedom from his domineering father’s control.
I found "Mixed Up" to be a major disappointment, just like the only other Korman book I've read. Both readings, I had no choice in the matter. Despite his popularity, I struggle to understand the appeal of his work. The premise of this book is engaging, but the execution falls flat. The explanation behind the memory swapping and its resolution are poorly developed and unsatisfying.
Things I Didn't Like:
Overall, "Mixed Up" had a promising premise but was ultimately bogged down by problematic messages, unrealistic scenarios, and underdeveloped plot resolutions. It’s a book I struggled to connect with and didn’t enjoy reading.
I don’t normally review books, but this is one of the best books I’ve ever read. I love Gordon Korman in general, so I had to read this.
Most of his books have at least four different perspectives, and I liked how this one only had two. This might be his first book where he’s done that, and if it is, I think he did it very well.
I loved the whole Reef thing with his mom and how Theo pieces it together and wanted to tell him that it wasn’t his fault. I thought the whole thing with Jaws was hilarious. I loved how Declan started calling Reef his brother after they helped with the Kiorsky kid. I also really liked Portia and how she was actually developed and not just a love interest.
My favorite moments: - When Reef kicks Declan and Theo forgets the martial arts kick - When Theo tracks down Reef with the cupola - When Theo and Reef text about random things they forgot - When Theo stops his dad from killing Jaws - When Declan pays the principal back what Reef “owed� her and says he’s innocent - When Declan gets really mad about the weather - When Theo hugs his dad because he thinks he’s gonna die - When they are rolling the tire through the school and have to explain it to the principal - When Declan saves the principal - When Theo forgets his dad “ruled the school� - When Jaws pees on Reef’s shirt
It was a bit of a letdown when they didn’t get their memories back, but I think that’s the only thing I disliked about this book.
It’s overall very well written. I think this is one of Gordon Korman’s best books, and I high recommend it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This is an enjoyable and accessible read. It will definitely appeal to middle school readers. I enjoyed the writing style, and the characters are well developed. The climax of the story felt a little bit forced, but that seems to fit with this particular genre. I will definitely read other books by this author.
The plot of this middle-grade novel is a big departure for GK. He does not typically write stories with a fantasy element. And the fantasy element in this novel is a really strange, surrealistic way to incorporate fantasy into an otherwise realistic story. Two boys, who were born on the same day, in the same hospital, and shared the same NICU incubator, 12 years later, with inexplicable timing, suddenly begin experiencing a psychic connection, in which they are switching memories. A lightning strike is the magical reason for this occurrence as well as its resolution, in an improbable homage to Mary Shelley's Frankenstein from 1818.
In terms of the realistic portion of this novel, I was particularly frustrated with the character of Declan. The motivation for his switch from sociopath to normal, empathetic teen over the course of the novel is as ridiculously unbelievable as the fantasy elements in this book.
Over the course of the previous year, I have read quite a few of GK's novels. Unfortunately, I have only enjoyed his comedies. His dramas, even when there is no weird fantasy element stuck in the middle of them, such as is the case for this novel, are just too far-fetched and melodramatic for my personal taste. I do understand, though, that his target audience, preteen boys who are reluctant readers, will very likely enjoy this book. For that reason, I would rate this book 4 stars on their behalf, and 2 stars on my behalf, averaging that to 3 stars.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I received a free copy of, Mixed Up, by Gordon Korman, from the publisher and Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Theo lost his mom and his family, living with a foster family is not easy especially when his foster brother hates him. Theo starts having other memories that are not his own, and losing his own memories, which are so precious to him, because they are memories of his mom. Reef Moody has been getting Theo's memories, and losing his own. This was a great read, I felt so bad for Theo, losing his mom and nobody believing in him or sticking up for him, then to start losing his memories and gaining someone else's. This book was a little freaky.
Gordon Korman is one of my favorite middle school authors, and this one did not disappoint. I particularly enjoy his using 2, sometimes more, character voices to tell the story. Also this one was written after Covid, which becomes part of the story.
Reef and Theo live in the same city, but in different areas, go to different schools and have different family lives. When they meet, Reef wants nothing to do with Theo, but due to an inexplicable condition they both seem to be "suffering" from, he has no choice but to associate with Theo. They come to terms with the unexplainable in a most unusual way, and find that they will continue to need to support each other as their life journey continues.
An interesting premise where two boys start sharing memories. It didn't end the way I had hoped, but it was a decent book that many boys age 10-14 would enjoy. Not my favorite Gordan Korman though.
I loved this book. It’s the first YA that I’ve read that includes Covid but doesn’t make it the center focus. Such a powerful message about human connection
Mixed Up is once again another awesome addition to the Gordon Korman library. Whether you have read his books for a long time or he's new to you, I definitely recommend this book.
Mixed Up's plot is similar to Korman's early 2022 book Operation Do-Over (a personal favorite of mine), borrowing some sci-fi like themes but with the usual Gordon Korman touch.
The protagonists Reef and Theo began swapping memories even though both don't know each other and live on opposite sides of the city. The memory swaps are hard on Reef because he's losing precious memories of his mother who recently passed away. Theo is losing simple information from his life that he needs for everyday things.
The two must find each other and try to get to the bottom of this strange mystery and get their rightful memories back.
Great book. Great characters. My only complaint was Reef's mom's cause of death was covid, which I thought was a little unrealistic.
As with Restart, Korman writes a mind-melding story where two middle school boys, unknown to each other, start trading memories. Reef is mourning the death of his mom while living with his mom's best friend's family, one of whom intensely doesn't want Reef around. Theo loves plants more than people much to his outgoing father's chagrin. Both boys are unhappy in their own ways and then they each start having strange memory flash backs of things they are sure have not happened to them. Eventually they meet, their lives get more and more challenging as they lose more of their own memories and then come up with a scheme to set things right.
Reef and Theo are middle schoolers who live on opposite sides of the city. Reef's mom has just died and he is living with his mom's best friend and her family. He feels lost and is made to feel not welcome by their youngest son, Declan. Theo lives in a home that seems terrific, but he does not meet his dad's expectations of what a middle schooler should be like. The boys start having these memories that do not belong to themselves. Then they start actually forgetting things they have done in their life. Eventually, Theo takes matters into his own hands to try and figure out what's going on. This would be a great read aloud for any middle school grade.
This was my first book by Gordon Korman and oh WOW� he get you invested in characters and their developments!
I will say that the major part of the story I felt very not on board with but I’m also not a teen and I think that many kids I’m this age group will love the what almost feels like� Freaky Friday of it all. Both Theo and Reef won my heart and how amazing would it be to visit these characters plus supporting characters again. I mean come on by the end I was rooting for Declan!
I definitely will be checking out more of this authors work!
Thank you Netgalley and Scholastic Press for this advance ecopy!
Twelve year old Reef Moody never knew his father, so when his mother passed away from COVID, he was lucky to be taken in by his mother's best friend, Jenna, and her husband Will. The Helmers are nice, and Liam and Caroline are accepting of their new family member, but Declan, who is two years older, is absolutely horrible to Reef. He throws things at him in his sleep, and even steals the principal's purse and hides it in Reef's sock drawer. Knowing that Reef has had a hard time, it is agreed that if he replaces the $200 that was stolen, he won't get in further trouble, so Reef has to deal with all of the garbage in the Helmer household for $20 per week. Across town, Theo Metzinger has his own troubles. His father wishes that Theo had more friends, did more activities, and had more interests than keeping the local rabbit menace, Jaws, away from the family vegetable garden. Theo is always being admonished to toughen up and "be a man", which just irritates him. Even his younger sister seems to fulfill his father's ideas about what he should be like better than Theor does. Both boys start to have memories that don't seem to belong to them, and at the same time, start to forget parts of their own lives. When a local warehouse fire shows a nearby school, Theo knows that it is the school from his memories and bikes the four miles across town to investigate. Once there, he meets Portia, whom he has seen in the memories, outside the school. In an uncharacteristic burst of extrovertism, he chats her up and finds out that she works at a local food pantry. In order to find out more about why he has memories of her, he works the food pantry into his schedule, along with martial arts and seeing a therapist. Reef struggles on, missing his mother and having to deal with Declan. His biggest fear is forgetting his mother, whose COVID death he blames on himself. Portia had had a birthday party, but then gotten sick, and Reef knows he passed on the virus to his mother. When the boys finally meet, they recognize each other and try to figure out what happened to connect their brains. It all comes down to the fact that they were born on the same day in the same hospital, so they investigate until they locate a nurse who was there the day they were born. She has some information about what happened, and the boys decide that in order to disconnect their brains, they need to recreate the environment that led to the connection. This isn't easy, especially since Declan and a local reprobate are trying to work out a food pantry heist. Will the boys be able to make peace with their lives and regain their own memories? Strengths: This was another fascinating premise from Korman, who has done several other interesting reflections about identity, like Restart and Operation Do-Over. Who are we if we can't remember what has happened in our lives? Reef's situation is both emotionally dire but physically pretty stable; Will and Jenna are very kind and understanding, and I like to think that after his problems with Declan are resolved, Reef will have a decent life, even though it will be sadder without his mother. Theo is able to show his father that there are ways other than his own to be a successful person. Portia is an interesting character who is friends with both boys and holds many elements of the story together. There's just enough unexplained phenomena in this one to categorize it as fantasy, but enough real world problems to appeal to even the most fantasy-averse reader. Weaknesses: Declan was so utterly evil to Reef that it was hard to believe that he would turn himself around, but it was good to see that he was able to. While the parental death was a key plot element, it's still just never my favorite topic. What I really think: As long as my students don't try to get hit by lightning while in a bouncy castle, I think this is a fun read with some very interesting ideas. I frequently recommend Korman titles to teachers as literature circle choices, since it is hard to go wrong with his work. This is dedicated to Korman fan "Raymond Jardine", @theamelpos, from Twitter, and now I really need to go back and read A Semester in the Life of a Garbage Bag!
Theo and Reef have their own problems, and then they have each other's. Body swap stories are usually definite and immediate switches—Jamie Lee Curtis goes back to high school, Tom Hanks gets a job at a toy company, Kevin Spacey is a cat—but Gordon Korman takes a fresh approach to the genre in Mixed Up. Theo and Reef are two twelve-year-old boys who find themselves unable to recall certain memories, but then can recall new memories... of a life they didn't live. Somehow, not by choice, they're trading memories to each other. Most body swap stories are about appreciating life, the one lost to the switch or one that had been lost on the way to adulthood, or coming to appreciate the person with whom you've changed places. These can be entertaining stories, but usually there's little else for the audience or reader to appreciate. The plots are pat, the messages sweeping. Not so here. Because the switch in Mixed Up happens gradually, its victims have time to contemplate their fates.
Reef in particular feels doomed, as memories of his dead mother blink out of his head. The transition from mother-and-son duo against the world to orphan taken in by a fairly hostile foster family was shocking enough. Now Reef envisions himself trapped in a family that rejects him without knowing why he's there to begin with and completely lacking the warmth of even the memory of his mother's face.
Korman's prose are entertaining, in turns funny and beautiful, but the plot never overshadows the characters' internal dilemmas. The protagonists take turns telling the story. Of course they grow to understand each other more deeply, as is expected in a body swap, but they also increasingly work together as a single unit. The joy of the book isn't the fish-out-of-water farce, like Big or Todd Strasser's Help! series, nor the mistaken identity romp, like Freaky Friday or Vice Versa—although elements of both are present here. What's unique and successful in Korman's story is the characters' growing reliance on each other: they aren't so much switching brains as merging into one person in two places.
What's more, there are no real villains here (with the exception of a fleeting side character who really just serves the purpose of revealing the complexity of another, more important secondary character). The secondary characters are complex, human. Their good intentions are revealed and honed by the growth of the main characters, mostly in ways they themselves never fully appreciate.
So much care is given to the emotions and motivations of all the characters in Mixed Up when the book could easily have been a straightforward mystery or comic thriller. Of course, that's par for the course for Gordon Korman who keeps churning out aces in the hole every few months.
“Some things that happen are so big you’re never the same afterward.� (ARC 39)
Seventh grader Reef Moody is grieving the death of his mother a year ago. He has set himself off from his friends, especially Portia, the girl he likes. He is convinced that he contracted Covid from Portia at her party—a party he begged his mother to let him attend—and passed it to his mother who died a few weeks later, and he is riddled with guilt. He was taken in by his mother’s best friend, but her teen children are not happy with the situation, especially Declan who bullies Reef continually and even gets him into trouble with the school principal.
And strangely, Reef’s memories of his mother are growing dim; he can hardly remember her face and he doesn’t know why. But he does have vivid memories from a life that he knows is not his, a life with a yard and a garden and a rabbit named Jaws. And a few times he has executed karate moves.
Meanwhile, on the other side of town lives Theo Metzinger, a seventh grader who takes karate and grows vegetable and fights with his nemesis, a rabbit named Jaws. Theo is much of a loner to the disappointment of his father, who, as an adolescent, “ruled the school.� And lately Theo is having memories of a lady and feeling an unbearable sadness. When Theo, at his school, begins seeing a different school—different tiles, different walls, a different walkway, and a cupola, he begins investigating and locates Delgado Middle School on the other side of town where he meets Portia and eventually Reef. “At last [Theo] begins, ‘There are things I remember that I know for a fact never happened to me.� ‘Me too!� [Reef] jumps in breathlessly.� (ARC 94)
Reef is not happy to meet Theo who he feels is stealing his life, at least his past. “It hits me: If Theo has access to my memories. How can he remember what I can’t. The answer is so obvious: He’s not sharing my memories; he’s stealing them.� (ARC 97-98) But as the two boys lose more and more memories and have to rely on each other more and more, they realize they need to solve the mystery. Theo realizes that Reef has a lot to lose—his life with his mother. Discovering that they were born on the same day in the same hospital, they research the possible cause of this strange phenomenon and plan a dangerous experiment to reverse it, aided by, strangely enough, Declan.
Told in alternating narratives, this is a story of friendship, family, and the importance of memories. “Memory: the mental process of registering, storing, and retrieving information.� (ARC 102), but so much more.
Twelve-year-olds Theo and Reef are entirely different personalities and life challenges, go to middle schools the opposite ends of town and would never have met if they hadn’t been forced to track each other down because they were (bizarrely) losing their memories to each other. No one believes them, of course, and concocting a pseudo-scientific theory on how to stop the damage becomes all-consuming for them throughout the book.
In other words, this novel takes us on a hilarious ride packed with action, tension and authentic middle-school angst, personalities and dialogue. There are misunderstandings galore, and an excellent cast of “side� characters including the popular girl who no one gets, the town bad guy and a nasty principal. Stakes keep getting higher until the wacky climax.
It’s all written in first person, with every other chapter is in Theo’s point of view and every other chapter in Reef’s. That keeps interest high, especially given that both are attracted to the same girl. But the main focus is on their freaky “Phenomenon� and how to reverse it.
Theo looks shocked for a moment and then breaks into a nervous laugh. “You really are the right guy. Makes sense, I guess. If I’ve got your memories, why shouldn’t you have mine?�
“Is this, like, a disease?� I wonder. “We both got sick, and now our brains are…switching heads?�
“Not our brains. I’m still me and you’re still you. But I remember your life like I’m the guy who lived it. And vice versa.� —Reef
Each character changes in an appropriate and satisfying manner by the end, and the writing is great quality. The premise itself is totally wonky, but any reader with a sense of humor will totally enjoy it. This review also appears at
Here's another Gordon Korman hit! Over 100 books make him a great go-to when looking for middle grade and YA novels. MIXED UP didn't disappoint.
Reef and Theo live on opposite sides of town and go to different middle schools. They have never met, but when their memories suddenly begin to switch places, discovering what's going on is a must.
Since Reef's mother died of COVID he has been living with his mother's best friend. It's nice that they took him in, but the living arrangement doesn't always make Reef feel welcome. For example, he shares a room with Declan who is a bully who isn't happy about this new member of the household. When Reef begins experiencing strange memories that can't possibly be his, he feels even more left out of this family than before.
Theo lives with his demanding father, busy mother, and sporty sister. His main interest is gardening which doesn't exactly thrill his competitive father. When he starts having flashes of memories that he can't identify, he's sure his family won't understand.
When Reef sees a middle school that matches the one in one of his new memories, he begins to investigate. His research leads him to the other side of town and eventually to Theo. These two strangers want to find out why their memories are switching places. Reef is especially concerned because when a memory of his dead mother appears in Theo's mind, that means Reef has lost that memory. What if he loses all his memories of his mother?
MIXED UP is one of those books that will make readers wonder how the author came up with such an idea. It won't take long for readers to be hooked by the impossibility as they connect with Reef and Theo and root for them to find some answers.
One of the things I've enjoyed about the few Korman books I've read are the emotional aspects and the life lessons some of these kids gain throughout the story. I also like that even though he's been writing for forever and a day, he still somehow manages to come out with relatively original story ideas.
This one takes place shortly after the initial pandemic burst and deals with a child who is grieving the loss of his mother, who died because of complications due to having covid. This immediately endeared me to him and made my heart hurt for him. I thought of all the little ones in the world who experienced this loss during those tumultuous years (and who may still be experiencing this even now). And when you add to the fact that this grieving boy feels like he's impeding on his adoptive family, you've got a recipe for an all-around heartbreak of a story.
But on the other hand, you have a kid who seemingly has everything, but the gender norms his father is so desperate for him to have. Both of these kids are dealing with their own struggles and while vastly different, they somehow work really well together. I loved seeing them come together as friends and brainstorm how to solve their situation.
I really enjoyed this for what it was. It wasn't something I'd re-read years from now, but it was timely (on the struggles perspective) and fresh--that memory concept was pretty cool. I'd definitely be recommending this to readers who come into the 9-12 section in our store, but I will definitely give them a heads up about some of the sadder aspects of this story.