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Lädt ... Carouselvon Brendan Ritchie
Keine Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. Set in W.A., this novel is alot like the "Gone" series by Michael Grant. Nox has pretended he is someone named Stuart and jumped into a pre-booked taxi that pulled up at his bus stop early as he was running late. The taxi only takes him as far as a giant new shopping centre called Carousel in Perth's outer suburbs, where he is told to go through a side staff door. When he walks in, he immediately sees Taylor and Lizzy who are famous rock star sisters. (Think Taylor Swift x 2 -twins). He is a huge fan and cautiously approaches them noticing at the same time that 1) he and they are the ONLY people in the centre 2) there is no cell phone nor wifi and 3) the doors all appear to be locked from the outside - they can't leave the centre! After introducing himself, the 3 bad together and this is where it gets very strange...they have the entire shopping center to themselves and all the shops are open and unlocked AND it appears to have backup generators for power, so they have electricity, food, clothes, and staff showers and toilets to use that also have fresh water. But maybe there IS someone in there with them, as the days go on and they start to notice things changed or missing. Also plaguing them is what has happened in the world outside? Has there been an apocalypse? The sisters are desperate to return to their native North America and try every door in the center to leave. They hear dogs barking outside and a noise like fireworks...what has happened? Nox is a believable if slightly boring character. He has a lot of flaws and is not your gutsy "save the day" type hero ( like Ellie in the TWTWB series) which makes him very believable at the same time. Taylor and Lizzy are far more interesting and it is worthy to note that Ritchie has made them both gay so it discounts the "forced romance" that so often happens in novels like this. the author concentrates on the effects of social isolation on the central characters as opposed to their material overload and lack of deprivation in a huge shopping complex stocked with everything they could possibly want. SPOILER: The 4th character Rocky is a bit under developed but as he is younger, he provides a child figure for the other 3 Twenty-somethings to nurture. A book similar to Gone and Monument 14 and the Charlie Higson Fear series although the main characters are older. It is for mature readers as it contains swearing, drugs and violence. First in a series of 2 books. Zeige 2 von 2 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
Gehört zur ReiheCarousel (1)
Nox is an arts graduate wondering what to do with his life. Taylor and Lizzy are famous indie musicians, and Rocky works the checkouts at Target. When they find themselves trapped in a giant shopping centre, they eat fast food, watch bad TV and wait for the mess to be sorted. But when days turn to weeks, a sense of menace grows. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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Like another reviewer, I am confused as to why this has been classed as YA. Nox, the narrator, is 22, and the indie music sisters are older than him. Rocky is the only teenager in the book and he isn't a main character. Surely this makes it fiction not YA fiction. I was disappointed with the blurb on the back of the book too. It gave the impression that this was an 'apocolypse' novel with characters trying to survive after being locked in a shopping center. Not just locked in. They couldn't even break out which alluded to something supernatural. It wasn't an apocolypse novel at all. It was about friendship in unlikely circumstances and how we deal with isolation and ignorance of the outside world.
Having said that, I did enjoy this book. It was well written, the characters were totally relatable and while nothing much happened, it gave a good idea of what could happen to a person mentally in such a situation.
There were too many problems with this book to give it more stars despite it being well written. The supernatural elements were never explained and this actually let the story down. Why couldn't they break out? (I have worked in a shopping center and it honestly wouldn't be hard to break out.)
Not a bad book, but a disappointment.
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