Published by the
Penguin Group
Summery:
[Back Cover]
Amy is a cryogenically
frozen passenger aboard the spaceship Godspeed. She has left her boyfriend, friends—and planet—behind to join her
parents as a member of Project Ark Ship. Amy and her parents believe they will
wake on a new planet, Centauri-Earth, three hundred years in the future. But
fifty years before Godspeed’s scheduled landing, cryo chamber 42 is
mysteriously unplugged, and Amy is violently woken from her frozen slumber.
Someone tried to
murder her.
Now, Amy is caught
inside a tiny world where nothing makes sense. Godspeed’s 2,312 passengers have forfeited all control to Eldest, a tyrannical
and frightening leader. And Elder, Eldest’s rebellious teenage heir, is both
fascinated with Amy and eager to discover whether he has what it takes to lead.
Amy desperately wants
to trust Elder. But should she put her faith in a boy who has never seen life
outside the ship’s cold metal walls? All Amy knows is that she and Elder must
race to unlock Godspeed’s hidden
secrets before whoever woke her tries to kill again.
Introduction:
This book, oh, this book. Where should I start with this?
First of all, the cover was beautiful! Not the one I ended up getting, which
was actually quite ugly, but Wal-Mart was selling it cheap so I took it. The
original cover looked so graceful and the colors were just lovely. That was
what drew me to pick it up in the first place. Then the description sounded so
exciting. It was a mystery story, in SPACE! How cool is that premise? Very
cool, I’d say. I went in expecting a romance/murder mystery story, but what I
got was something that shouldn’t have been put to print. Seriously, I don’t
understand any of the positive reviews on this book. For one thing, the romance
was nonexistent. It was just a bunch of lusting from the male character and
pretty much nothing from the female character. Another thing was the slow pacing
and the characters’ ability to forget about the cryogenically frozen passengers
who are getting murdered. Really, it
would seem like they would forget for a long while, and then suddenly remember
that those people were there and then do a little more thinking about the
situation, never moving on the figuring out the connections which were staring
at them and blaringly obvious. Expect this to be the harshest review I’ve ever
done. I usually try to find something good about a book, but it will be hard to
do with this one.
This is the cover I got. |
Characters:
We’re first introduced to Amy when she and her parents are
being put in the cryo chambers. That scene was intense and vivid, I’ll give it
that. It grossed me out, and I felt sorry that her family had to go through
that. For the good portion of half the book, Amy is in the cryo chamber,
dreaming or thinking. The chapters are usually short, and didn’t really add
much to the story or her character. I guess it was to show that Amy wasn’t
completely out of it. She could sense the passage of time in a way, but never
know just how long she had been in the cryo chamber. Once Amy is let out, she
immediately starts to act with no thought to the consequences to her actions.
She awakes to a ship that is mono-ethnic, and the people have never seen anyone
with pale skin and red hair. She completely stands out, and she is told to stay
in the hospital to avoid any trouble. What does she do then? She goes for a run
outside around the ship. Yup, smart move. She nearly gets in big trouble. The
leader of the ship, Eldest, threatens her, but she continues to go on and do
things her way. Now, when it’s because she’s trying to find out who tried to
murder her and is trying to murder the others, I can see that, because he’s a
suspect. But for a good portion of the book, she does nothing but complain that
she ever came in the first place. She kept complaining that the way things were
on the ship were wrong, but never did anything to explain why they were wrong.
Poor Elder was probably so confused by her. The girl barely did anything.
Elder is the only teenager aboard Godspeed (I’ll explain why later), and he is to be the next Eldest.
Elder is introduced in the second chapter, and is the reader’s link to how the
ship thinks. He’s also the romantic interest for Amy, such as it was. He sees
her in the cryo chamber and can’t help but think how different and beautiful
she looks, and how much he wants to kiss her, and other things. When she is
unfrozen, he tries to get to know her better, while also trying to please
Eldest, who is teaching him how to become the next leader. He had doubts about
if he would make a good leader, which was believable. He also seemed to have
unwavering faith in Eldest at some points, and then be completely distrustful
of him the next. He battled with the things he used to know, and with the
truths he was coming to learn. All in all, he would have been a believable and
maybe even likable character, but there was no personality, nothing to
distinguish him, and he seemed kind of wishy-washy in my opinion. He was also
very disrespectful to the idea of God and laughed when Amy mentioned it, saying
believing in that was ridiculous. The only reason he seemed to like Amy was so
he would have a special someone to experience the Season with. I don’t want to
get started on that, but I must if I am to do this review right. But I’m not
going to talk about it now.
The only character I enjoyed was Harley. He was Eldest’s
best friend who lived in the hospital because he was supposedly insane. He was
an artist, and was quite enthusiastic about it. Creative people are those I can
understand and relate to more. He was also very kind and caring, and took good
care of Amy when Elder was off with Eldest. I actually would have preferred
Harley to be the romantic interest. If I never understood the term “chemistry”
before I read this book, I do now, because Amy and Eldest had none! Harley and
Amy had more chemistry together and they didn’t even have feelings for one
another! It’s strange how supportive characters seem to be the better people in
books or movies. I don’t know why it seems to be like that.
My Thoughts:
Ok, so here’s the part where I usually talk about what I
liked about the book. Well, I can’t really do that now, because I just
mentioned Harley above, and he was the only highlight of this book for me. In
reviews I’ve read for this book, people would go on about how well-written it
was, and how poetic it sounded, and how great the plot was. Um, did we read the
same book? This is actually the first book that I’ve made marks in the margins.
Not only for the grammar and punctuation errors, but for odd situations that
came up, or the use of the wrong word in a sentence. It was not well-written in
my opinion. And then there was the use of made up words that annoyed me to no
end. Yes, I get it, it’s almost three hundred years into the future, so there
are bound to be either new words, or old words with different meanings, but
seriously, the substitute swear words were just cheesy. I’m glad the author
didn’t use the real thing instead, since it seemed to be Elder’s favorite word,
but still, why make one up? Another word often used by Elder was “brilly” and I
couldn’t really get what the meaning was supposed to be. Was it supposed to be
a positive word or a negative? Because I think the author used it for both.
There were more words that were made up, but I think just mentioning those two
will be enough. It was annoying and silly sounding. The overuse of them either
made me laugh or groan.
Then there was the blaringly obvious plot twist. For the
entire book, the characters are trying to figure out what Amy and the other
victims had in common. They even made a list and drew lines connecting similar
aspects, but never seemed to grasp it. To me, it was so obvious that I was able
to see it without the use of their chart. Why couldn’t the characters see the
connection? I won’t say what the connection was, because if someone decides to
read this book after my review, I don’t want to spoil anymore of it than I have
to. But really, the clues the author placed in the book for the reader weren’t
cleverly hidden, and they just made the characters seem either dumb, or
uncaring about what was happening. And then the shocking twist about the
villain. Gasp! I didn’t see that one coming. -_- (Hear my sarcasm there?)
The absolute worst part of this book? Every scene that had
something to do with the Season. To keep a regulated population, every person
went through the Season. Elder is the only teenage aboard because he was born
to be the next Eldest, who is supposed to be older than the generation he
rules. The Season had the entire ship’s population going about acting like
animals in heat. It was extremely inappropriate for a Young Adult audience, and
was the most graphic, terrible, and perverted majority of a book that I’ve ever
come across. There was absolutely no point in putting such a nasty thing into a
book that could very well be read by some young teenager that does not need to
read something like this. Where’s a fire when I need it? This book ought to be
burned.
Warnings:
Pretty much everything one could warn about is in this book.
Language? Yes, both the real thing, and made up substitutes. Sexual content?
For many chapters it’s talked about and described. Suicide? It has that in
there too. Violence? Some, but not bad.
My Age Rating: 20
and up. (But if I were to be truthful, it’s not appropriate for anyone of any
age. It’s just rubbish.)
~Cya!
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