Life As We Knew It (Last Survivors, Bk 1)
Author:
Genres: Literature & Fiction, Teen & Young Adult
Book Type: Paperback
Author:
Genres: Literature & Fiction, Teen & Young Adult
Book Type: Paperback
Erin S. (nantuckerin) reviewed on + 158 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 8
This is, hands-down, the best book I have read so far this year.
When things aren't coming up roses in my own life, sometimes it helps to read something to put things in perspective and remind me that, no matter how bad things seem, they could be worse. Much, much worse.
Life As We Knew it follows the story of a 16-year-old girl, her two brothers and her mother as they deal with the aftermath of a global environmental disaster. An asteroid has hit the moon, and thrown off the gravitational pull. The main characters in the book go quickly from enjoying meteor-watching block parties to trying to learn how to live in the new world that results from the impact.
I most enjoy young adult books with a strong central adult figure, and Pfeffer didn't disappoint. Reading this book through the filter of a parent was nothing short of terrifying. As tidal waves, earthquakes, volcanoes and a sunlight-choking global dust cloud threaten society on every continent, it was gripping to follow the mother along her journey to keep her kids safe -- and fed. Hunger becomes the real threat all too quickly. And I'll fess up -- I found myself neurotically checking my pantry stock at odd times as I made my way through this book. Books like these force you to think about what you'd do if faced with the same situation, and I only hope I would deal with the crisis with the level-head that the mother in Pfeffer's story did.
The book showed the crisis through the eyes of the 16-year-old narrator, meaning that readers are deprived all the details of the crisis, both because of the worldwide information blackout that occurs and because of the narrator's typical teenage "I'm-the-center-of-the-universe" attitude. I would have liked to know more about exactly what was happening in other parts of the world as a result of the asteroid, but we're treated to the same information vacuum as the characters as communications, media transmissions and even the mail eventually cease.
Overall, a fantastic read that I'd recommend to almost anyone. But I have to admit, after reading Life As We Knew It, I'll never gaze romantically up at the moon in quite the same way again....
When things aren't coming up roses in my own life, sometimes it helps to read something to put things in perspective and remind me that, no matter how bad things seem, they could be worse. Much, much worse.
Life As We Knew it follows the story of a 16-year-old girl, her two brothers and her mother as they deal with the aftermath of a global environmental disaster. An asteroid has hit the moon, and thrown off the gravitational pull. The main characters in the book go quickly from enjoying meteor-watching block parties to trying to learn how to live in the new world that results from the impact.
I most enjoy young adult books with a strong central adult figure, and Pfeffer didn't disappoint. Reading this book through the filter of a parent was nothing short of terrifying. As tidal waves, earthquakes, volcanoes and a sunlight-choking global dust cloud threaten society on every continent, it was gripping to follow the mother along her journey to keep her kids safe -- and fed. Hunger becomes the real threat all too quickly. And I'll fess up -- I found myself neurotically checking my pantry stock at odd times as I made my way through this book. Books like these force you to think about what you'd do if faced with the same situation, and I only hope I would deal with the crisis with the level-head that the mother in Pfeffer's story did.
The book showed the crisis through the eyes of the 16-year-old narrator, meaning that readers are deprived all the details of the crisis, both because of the worldwide information blackout that occurs and because of the narrator's typical teenage "I'm-the-center-of-the-universe" attitude. I would have liked to know more about exactly what was happening in other parts of the world as a result of the asteroid, but we're treated to the same information vacuum as the characters as communications, media transmissions and even the mail eventually cease.
Overall, a fantastic read that I'd recommend to almost anyone. But I have to admit, after reading Life As We Knew It, I'll never gaze romantically up at the moon in quite the same way again....
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