Who Is The Main Character In The Dead And The Gone?

2026-03-25 08:14:56 254

4 Answers

Lydia
Lydia
2026-03-26 18:25:08
You know what's refreshing? A dystopian hero who isn't some scrappy underdog or chosen savior. Alex Morales is more like someone you might actually know—a scholarship student at a Catholic school who suddenly has to become the man of the house at 17. His relationship with his sisters feels so genuine, especially the way he clashes with Julie as she starts questioning his authority. The book's brilliance lies in small moments—Alex memorizing grocery prices, debating whether to loot pharmacies, even his internal monologue about whether God's punishing him. It's less about big action sequences and more about the psychological toll of keeping two kids alive in a drowned city. Makes you wonder how you'd hold up in his shoes.
Dylan
Dylan
2026-03-26 22:12:34
Alex Morales—that name still gives me chills. What gets me is how ordinary he starts out: worrying about schoolwork, annoyed by his little sisters, helping at his dad's bodega. Then the moon gets closer and everything goes to hell. His transformation isn't some heroic arc; it's a slow erosion of childhood as he barters with looters, identifies corpses, and learns which rules still matter in the apocalypse. The scene where he washes his sister's hair with bottled water because the pipes are gone? That's when I knew this wasn't your average survival story. Pfeffer made me believe in every second of Alex's nightmare.
Yvette
Yvette
2026-03-29 20:52:37
Man, Alex Morales really got under my skin when I read this book last summer. He's this tough but vulnerable kid who basically becomes the parent to his sisters Julie and Briana after tidal waves and earthquakes wipe out New York's infrastructure. What struck me was how different he feels from typical YA protagonists—no romantic subplots, no rebellion for rebellion's sake. Just pure survival mode, negotiating with nuns at his school for shelter, figuring out how to bury bodies properly when the city collapses. The scene where he trades his dead mother's wedding ring for antibiotics? Gut-wrenching. Susan Beth Pfeffer really made you feel the weight of every decision.
Ian
Ian
2026-03-31 20:54:49
The Dead and the Gone' is one of those books that sticks with you long after you finish it. The main character is Alex Morales, a 17-year-old Puerto Rican boy living in New York City when a series of catastrophic natural disasters strike. What makes Alex so compelling is how realistically he's written—he's not some chosen one or superhero, just a kid forced to grow up overnight when his parents disappear and he's left caring for his younger sisters.

What I love about Alex's character is how his faith and cultural background shape his responses to the crisis. The way he grapples with guilt, responsibility, and survival while trying to maintain his Catholic faith adds layers you don't often see in dystopian protagonists. His journey from a disciplined schoolboy to a hardened survivor feels achingly authentic—especially those moments when he has to make impossible choices about rationing food or protecting his sisters. It's a far cry from the glamorized apocalypse stories we usually get.
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