Mars Evacuees
Material type:
- 9781405268677
- YA/F/MCD
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | YL/MCD | Checked out | Age 11 - 15 (Red) | 20/05/2025 | CY00008221 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
The fact that someone had decided I'd be safer on Mars, where you could still only SORT OF breathe the air and SORT OF not get sunburned to death, was a sign that the war with the aliens was not going fantastically well. I'd been worried that I was about to be told that my mother's spacefighter had been shot down, so when I found out that I was being evacuated to Mars, I was pretty calm. And, despite everything that happened to me and my friends afterwards, I'd do it all again. Because until you have been shot at, pursued by terrifying aliens, taught maths by a laser-shooting robot goldfish and tried to save the galaxy, I don't think you can say that you've really lived. If the same thing happens to you, this is my advice: ALWAYS CARRY DUCT TAPE.
£6.99
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
School Library Journal Review
Gr 5-7-Alice Dare's mother is a pilot, fighting the Morrors in space, and her father works on a submarine, laying mines. Just 15 years in the future, the world is slowly freezing-making it more comfortable for the invading Morrors, but worse for humankind. Sooner than expected, Alice is evacuated to Mars, and enrolled as a cadet in the Exo-Defense Force, under the watchful eyes of a variety of robots and in the blustery command of Colonel Dirk Cleaver, who is determined to whip the children into a fearsome fighting force. Mars has undergone intensive terraforming and now sports a somewhat breathable atmosphere and the beginnings of plant life, along with a low gravity bounciness that's hard to resist. With new friends Carl and Josephine, Alice participates in drills, has some fun, and steps into a leadership role when the adults on the base disappear. Determined to get help, Alice, Josephine, and Carl steal a Flying Fox and cross paths with a Morror their own age. These young friends help the adults see that the real threat is not from one another, and the story wraps up with hope that humans and Morrors can coexist. This book has plenty of action, with middle school humor and an occasional, but mild, swear thrown in during times of stress. Suggest to fans of Margaret Peterson Haddix's "The Missing" series (S. & S.) and Emma Clayton's The Roar (Scholastic, 2009).-Maggie Knapp, Trinity Valley School, Fort Worth, TX (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Booklist Review
Twelve-year-old Alice never asked to become a cadet at the Emergency Earth Coalition school on Mars, but since Earthlings are fighting a losing battle against the Morrors (aliens transforming Earth to make it cold enough for their survival), she tries to do her part. As annoying as the adults running the school can be, it's alarming when they disappear without a trace. Alice and three friends steal a spaceship and mount a rescue mission that goes wrong in so many ways (malfunctioning robots! space monsters!! alien abduction!!!) that its ultimate success seems as impossible as it is inevitable. The four main characters are vividly portrayed individuals with distinct personalities, interests, and quirks. Writing in Alice's voice, McDougall attends to the technological details in a way that makes this space-based flight of fancy easy to visualize and convincing within its admittedly improbable framework. The setting may be the future, but there's plenty of good old-fashioned storytelling and humor here. Sure to please armchair adventurers with their eyes on the stars, or at least the closer planets.--Phelan, Carolyn Copyright 2015 BooklistHorn Book Review
In this gentler, distinctly more comic Ender's Gamelike story, twelve-year-old Alice and her friends from the military training school on Mars make common cause with a youthful alien in order to save both their species from an even greater galactic threat. Fast paced and filled with comic jabs at pedagogical robots, this adventure features friendship, humor, and the salvation of Earth. (c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Kirkus Book Review
In a future in which alien intervention has drastically reversed global warming, British schoolgirl Alice Dare discovers that, instead of beginning a new semester at Muckling Abbot School for Girls, she's been drafted into basic training on Mars, fighting the enemies of the human race.Science-fiction novels have always borrowed from one another, but it's surprising how many different tropes McDougall employs. There's plenty of space warfare, of course, but there are also scenes that resemble stories about boarding schools. And when the students meet the Morrors, the dialogue owes a huge debt to Adam Rex's The True Meaning of Smekday (2007). Oddly enough, all this sampling and shifting of tone increase the novel's suspense. The second half of the story is one reversal after another, and that makes up for the much slower early chapters. People reading the first 50 pages may start to list things the characters aren't doing: They don't encounter aliens. They don't fire weapons. They don't go to Mars. There is, however, a fair amount of schoolwork. Alice's deadpan narration is always entertaining, and a few sentences are dazzling, like a description of Earth from far away: "And then we saw a pale bluish star that was brighter than the others, and it grew in the dark, like a flower." The strange pacing sometimes makes the book feel unbalanced, but the action sequences are worth the wait. (Science fiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.
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No cover image available | Mars Evacuees by Sophia McDougall ©2014 |