Gr 7 Up—Except for her younger cousin, 17-year-old Kaelyn's family is gone. When her best friend, Leo, arrives to tell her that the quarantine of their tiny island off the south coast of Nova Scotia didn't work and that the virus has become a global pandemic, it seems as if all hope is lost. Then Kaelyn discovers that her father developed a vaccine; she's determined to get it into the hands of someone who can replicate it and save the world. She and her friends begin a long winter trek toward Ottawa and hope. But hope is hard to find in this new world ravaged by disease, and their journey soon becomes a struggle for survival. The first chapter of this sequel is a continuation of Kaelyn's journal that made up the content of
The Way We Fall (Hyperion, 2012), but the rest of the story unfolds in a straightforward, first-person narrative. The storytelling is choppily episodic as Kaelyn and her friends encounter those who have risen to power as well as people who are willing to help them. The characters are distinct, and many of them experience nuanced soul-wrestling as the story unfolds. The author has made some convenient choices in order to direct the plot, but on the whole this is a readable tale about courage and heroism in the face of a world that is falling apart.—
Heather M. Campbell, formerly at Philip S. Miller Library, Castle Rock, COThe sequel to The Way We Fall (rev. 3/12) picks up immediately where the last left off, with Kaelyn's small Canadian-island community devastated by a lethal virus and her friend Leo just returned from the mainland. But Leo's news is terrible: "There's no help…Everything's fallen apart," he tells them, and he joins the makeshift family of Kaelyn, her boyfriend Gav, her seven-year-old cousin, and Leo's girlfriend Tessa. When Kaelyn discovers vials containing the vaccine her father was working on when he was killed, they attempt to reach a hospital in Ottawa to deliver the vaccine, joining up with a soldier along the way. As Leo warned, society on the mainland has deteriorated even more than on the island, so the group must advance cautiously, sometimes making mistakes about who is trustworthy, and always alert for signs of the contagious virus. Kaelyn stays strong and committed to her quest, clinging to her belief that somehow life can get back to normal, but Leo argues, "Maybe when life gets tough enough, we all turn into bad people." This is the middle volume of a trilogy, with no resolution and with a large group of characters to keep straight, but the scarily realistic settings and a tautly paced, well-researched plot will keep readers anxiously awaiting the next volume. susan dove lempke
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