Sunday, November 9, 2014

The 5th Wave



The 5th Wave
by Rick Yancey
Holland, OH: Dreamscape Media
2013
Performed by Phoebe Strole and Brandon Espinoza
10 sound discs (12 hours 42 minutes)





Recently, teens were allowed to vote for their favorite Top Ten Books in YALSA's (Young Adult Library Services Association) book challenge. The 5th Wave was on the list of  25 titles popular among teens right now, but it was not chosen. Personally, I am rather disappointed about this because I really like this book! It definitely is one of my Top Ten on that list!

In a sea of dystopian fiction for teenagers right now, this book stands out as being different.Instead of the world falling apart due to human actions through war, stupidity, or disease, this story revolves around the end of life as we know it due to an unusual alien invasion.

Let me explain the Waves:
  1. The First Wave was a massive EMP strike (revisit electromagnet pulses in Ilsa Bick's trilogy) that shorted out all forms of technology and electrical devices. Think about when the power goes out at your house. What can you do? Not a lot, unless you have some things that run on batteries or gas. And if you are lucky, you can always go stay with a friend or at a hotel. But what if everyone's power was out all over the world? Not only would your lights not work in an EMP strike, but your cell phone, your car battery, etc. would not function.
  2. The Second Wave was a tsunami wave, created by the Others when they dropped some form of metal rod from the upper atmosphere onto one of the earth's fault lines. Coastal cities on all seven continents were wiped out, including huge cities such as New York and Los Angeles.
  3. The Third Wave was a formidable plague that wiped out ninety-seven percent of the remaining human population. Also called the "blood plague," the Others engineered a virus so quickly fatal that humans didn't have a chance to even find a cure. Not all people who contracted the plague died. Ben was the sole survivor in his family, but nobody knows why some people were spared.
  4. The Fourth Wave was a group of silencers, people previously embedded with alien consciousnesses and awakened to their alien self, who travel the countryside, shooting any humans they discover.
Our story begins in the middle of the Fourth Wave, when humans are huddling together in small communities, waiting and wondering what is next for them. There is a giant spaceship in the sky which no one has managed to contact or, as is more likely, the aliens are purposely ignoring the contact. People had thought the aliens would be interested in meeting them, with visions of an E.T. visit, but it has turned out to be more like the War of the Worlds, without the happy-ish ending.

Scene from the 1953 version of The War of the Worlds

Cassie, her father and brother, Sam, are living in a camp of survivors. Things are okay, not great, but at least they are together. Cassie's mother and many of her friends and neighbors had died of the plague.

One day, they hear the sound of buses rumbling into the camp. It's the army to rescue! Or is it? The buses turn out to be older school buses and the army personnel who come with them start rounding up all of the children. They tell the adults that they are taking the smallest children to the closest military base for safety and then more buses will return for them. Most parents seem unhappy about this, but they want their children to be safe. When Cassie's and Sam's turn comes to board the bus, Cassie is not allowed on--only Sam is wanted. Cassie, being protective of her brother and adamant about the small family staying together, argues that either she goes or Sam stays. In the end, Sam goes without Cassie but gives her his teddy bear to keep her safe, with the hopes that she will return it soon.

After the buses leave, the rest are rounded up into the buildings. Cassie starts to get suspicious about what is happening, only to have her fears confirmed. She only manages to escape by hiding in the nearby ash pit, comprised of the ashes of the dead.

I don't to tell you how this story comes out because I want you to read it, but Cassie, in her quest to find and rescue her brother from murderers, discovers the true nature of the Fifth Wave. She learns that she isn't the only human on earth, which worried her for a while, and that not all of the "others" are cruel destroyers of all human life. She learns to trust again, although doing so leaves her very exposed physically, mentally, and emotionally.

I particularly like Cassie as a main female character. She reminds me somewhat of Alex in the Ilsa Bick trilogy in the way she, as an ordinary high school girl, finds the strength and smarts to survive in the wilderness. Neither girl really knows what is happening or why. I know plenty of young women who would probably feel lost and helpless without their cell phones and the internet to tell them what to do or what is going on. The drive and urgency to help another person or people to survive, too, also plays a part in both stories, and maybe that helps them carry on and not give up despite the odds.

There are also two very strong male characters: Ben (Zombie) and Evan Walker. Ben has the guts to stick up for younger kids in the military camp. He is the main reason that Cassie's little brother, Sam, is able to deal with what has happened to him. Evan Walker is a mystery and I can't wait to find out how his character develops and interacts with the other human characters.

I liked the audio version of this story. We have two readers, Brandon Espinoza and Phoebe Strole. It makes sense in this story since we switch back and forth between Cassie and Evan and Ben. Both readers are smooth and engaging. I look forward to hearing more from them in the second volume.

The movie version is being cast as we speak. It is due to come out in January 2016. I can't wait!






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