Showing posts with label post apocalyptic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label post apocalyptic. Show all posts

Monday, April 20, 2015

Breathe by Sarah Crossan

A book review by Madeline Soucie


Bea has been friends with Quinn for ages. Despite the fact that he's a premium and she's not, they've stuck together. When Quinn invited her on a camping trip outside the pod, she was excited and hoped he'd finally see her and realize that she likes him.
        
Quinn should be worried about Alina -- and himself for that matter -- she's dangerous. Imagine how much trouble he could get in... But she wants him to help save her and he likes her...when does that ever happen?
       
Alina has been stealing for a long time. She's part of a resistance group that wants to regrow trees. Right now all she needs to focus on is staying low and not getting caught.

       
Everything has died in the world -- the plants, trees, animals  -- gone. As is the oxygen. The surviving humans live in a pod that is generated by Breathe - a corporation that generates oxygen-rich air for people to breathe.


Find it in APL TEEN Fiction YA FIC Crossan, S.


Monday, September 1, 2014

The Eternity Cure by Julia Kagawa

A book review by Madeline Soucie


This is the second book in the Blood of Eden series, the first being The Immortal Rules.

Allison Sekemoto was turned into a vampire as a last resort to dying. Now her life is threatened again as a new strain of the Red Lung -- a disease that almost wiped out the human race once before -- has been released.
    
Book CoverAllison must also hunt down the psychotic vampire Sarren who is torturing her sire in hopes of finding a cure for the virus before time runs out. But while looking for Kanin, Allie runs into some trouble and people she didn't expect to see.

    
In the Eternity Cure all the rules Allison learned in the first book are enforced like she never knew they could be and she learns just how blood calls to blood.




Find it in APL TEEN New Books YA FIC Kagawa, J.

Monday, August 18, 2014

The Fifth Wave by Rick Yancey

A book review by Madeline Soucie

Book Cover                 
The first wave knocked out all the lights and electronics. The second wave brought in tsunamis that wiped out the coasts. The third wave brought in disease. In the fourth wave they killed. Now the fifth wave is coming and very few are left.
    
Trust no one. That's what the alien invasion has taught sixteen year old Cassie. The aliens look like humans, so one can't be sure who's alien and who's human. What's left of the world is in chaos. Over seven billion are dead and the survivors are struggling. Cassie is one of those on the run from place to place trying to find some temporary place to rest, always looking over her shoulder.
    
Then she meets Evan Walker -- a mysterious boy who she befriends against her better judgment. Evan may just be the key to finding Cassie's brother.

    
This was a really good page-turner about an alien invasion of a different kind and humanity's fight to overcome the intruders.


Find it in APL TEEN Fiction YA FIC Yancey, R.

Monday, July 7, 2014

The Scorch Trials by James Dashner

A book review by Kat Seevers


(Book 2 of The Maze Runner series)


Thrown into the action right from page one, The Scorch Trials is far better than The Maze runner. The main character, Thomas, can’t catch a break even when he thinks he’s safe. Although this book reads more like a zombie story with the ‘Flare‘ disease, I enjoyed the action after the slow, easy pace of life in the Maze.  


This book kept me reading with its constant danger and lack of conveniences, which was something that had really annoyed me in the first book.


Find it in APL TEEN Fiction YA FIC Dashner, J.

Monday, June 30, 2014

The Lost Code by Kevin Emerson

A book review by Madeline Soucie


It is years into the future and the ozone layer that protects humans from the sun is slowly breaking down. Domes have been built to help block radiation, though they are few and fewer live in them -- mainly those who are privileged enough. No one can go out without protective lotion to help battle the awful effects of the radiation.

This was all caused by an ancient civilization who used their technology for what they thought was good and nearly destroyed the earth and its human population. They sacrificed three to stop their mistakes and save humanity. Those three left a legacy behind so that if someone ever found the technology to destroy the earth and its population again, three would be chosen to save the world. The time is quickly coming. Owen is one of the three, though he doesn't know it yet. Owen who seems least capable for the job, must unlock the code in his genes to unravel the hidden history.


Kevin Emerson writes a different and new spin on an ancient myth everybody knows and weaves it into a dystopian futuristic society that isn't what it says it is.    


Find it in APL TEEN Fiction YA FIC Emerson, K.

Monday, June 23, 2014

The Knife Of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness

A book review by Kat Seevers



Ultimately, this book is like a study of gender through a science fiction point of view. 

Todd's fight with Viola forces him to rethink everything he has learned about women, as well as what it means to be a man. The knife of the title also plays a key role in Todd's journey as he tries to defend Viola from villainous townspeople. His conversations with her about faith, hope, and growing up will surprise anyone expecting a plain, old story of "good vs. evil." 

A great book for expanding horizons.

This is book one of the Chaos Walking series.


Find it in APL TEEN Fiction YA FIC Ness, P.

Monday, May 12, 2014

The Maze Runner by James Dashner

A book review by Kat Seevers



I absolutely loved The Maze Runner! 

The maturity of the characters despite their age and circumstances is astounding. They were organized and worked together to create a mini society in the middle of the Maze where they're trapped. Complete with a farm, canteen, and designated jobs, they still manage to keep searching for a way out. Why were the boys put in the Maze in the first place? Who created it? Is there an escape? Why just boys? 

The pace of the story is very slow at first but speeds up in some places, giving it a real-time quality. This suited me just fine as I’m not fond of stories with constant action that doesn’t give you time to really become aware of the situation and the setting. The pace gave me the time to ‘get to know’  the main characters and my way around the maze extremely well. There was, of course, added twists, which were generally unpredictable and unexpected. 

Overall, a great book!


Find it in APL Teen Fiction YA FIC Dashner, J.