Glow Audiolibro Por Amy Kathleen Ryan arte de portada

Glow

Sky Chasers, Book 1

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Glow

De: Amy Kathleen Ryan
Narrado por: Ilyana Kadushin, Matthew Brown
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One of School Library Journal's Best Fiction Books of 2011

If a violent battle destroyed the only world you've ever known, would you be brave enough to save who was left? Would love be strong enough to survive the fight? Either way, there's no turning back.

The Empyrean is the only home 15-year-old Waverly has ever known. Part of the first generation to be successfully conceived in deep space, she and her boyfriend Kieran will be pioneers of New Earth. Waverly knows she must marry young in order to have children who can carry on the mission, and Kieran, the handsome captain-to-be, has everything Waverly could want in a husband. Everyone is sure he's the best choice. Still, there's a part of Waverly that wants more from life than marriage, and she is secretly intrigued by the shy, darkly brilliant Seth.

Suddenly, Waverly's dreams are interrupted by the inconceivable – a violent betrayal by the Empyrean's sister ship, the New Horizon. The New Horizon's leaders are desperate to populate the new planet first, and will do anything to get what they need: young girls. In one pivotal moment, Waverly and Kieran are separated, and find themselves at the helm of dangerous missions, where every move has potentially devastating consequences, and decisions of the heart may lead to disaster.

Pulse-pounding and addictive, Glow begins Amy Kathleen Ryan's Sky Chasers--the most riveting series since The Hunger Games.

©2011 Amy Kathleen Ryan (P)2011 Macmillan Audio
Acción y Aventura Ciencia Ficción Ciencia Ficción y Fantasía Fantasía Ficción Romance Matrimonio Sincero

Reseñas de la Crítica

“In outer space, two spaceships are dueling for their own fates as well as the fate of New Earth. Likewise, dual narration brings drama to the adventures of the EMPYREAN and the NEW HORIZON. Matt Brown has excellent pacing in the narration of Kieran's point of view…Kadushin is a great fit for the voice of Waverley, a strong, independent thinker who assumes the role of leader as the oldest girl aboard the EMPYREAN.” —AudioFile Magazine

“Kadushin and Brown provide spellbinding narration… Ryan's novel translates perfectly to audio with its combination of compelling characters and exciting edge-of-your-seat action scenes. Listeners will be unable to turn off this audiobook – whether they listen in the car, at home, or at work – because they need to find out what happens next.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review

“Our favorite part: You're never quite sure who to trust in this book. Each character has, at the very least, dual motives, which makes for a super-exciting plot... Plus, the mysterious ending left us anxious for the next installment! You'll love it if you love futuristic post-apocalyptic stories, like The Hunger Games!” —Seventeen.com

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A really interesting sci fi. I loved it, but I love all young adult sic fi books.

Unique

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First off, this was much more grim than I was expecting! But then, for some reason I was expecting a sappy teenage love story, and with the space battle and all the desperate fights to save a spaceship and survive captivity, there wasn’t time! All in all? This is what happens when space colonists meet the boys from Lord of the Flies and a crazy baby cult. Not a lot of clear thinking, lots of pressure, and plenty of room for disaster.


The plot switches between Waverly and Kieran’s points of view, each with its own narrator – both of whom read very well, by the way. They’re about sixteen, and as the oldest girl and boy on a space voyage that will take nearly a century, they thought their lives were all mapped out. That all changes the day their spaceship unexpectedly catches up to the one that left ahead of them.

I really enjoyed hearing the details about life aboard the ships. The gardens and orchards, everyone’s jobs, what they ate, how day-to-day life went, that sort of thing. As always with sci-fi, I found myself picking out small details that couldn’t be true, but that’s almost part of the fun for me. Another reviewer mentioned that the adults on this voyage were like “lemmings,” and there were several times I had to agree! Perhaps life in a small, enclosed community breeds naiveté? Interestingly, while Waverly and Kieran are clearly marked as the main characters, I found Kieran to be much less interesting than the other boys on the ship. He’s too weak and spoiled. But then, this isn’t a story about perfect people. In fact, it’s clear the whole time that human flaws are what drive everything about the storyline! By the end of the book it’s hard to tell who to trust, up to and including the main characters.

For a book marketed towards adolescents there are some seriously adult issues floating around. The rights of the individual vs. the rights of a group, procreative rights, the role of religion in society, morality, organized religion vs. cult behavior… And the interesting thing is that the answers aren’t all spelled out. For example, we see religion used for horrible purposes, religion used for good purposes, and then are given pause to wonder, “Wait, is that what’s really going on?” I was almost turned off when for a moment it looked like a strong dose of Sunday School was going to descend on the story and simplistically save the day, but that’s not what ended up happening at all. The day is not yet saved, simplistically or otherwise, and while religion is definitely an element, it’s not clear which way the chips will fall by the end of the trilogy.

The book ends at a reasonable stopping point, but also sees things running headlong toward a new conflict. The characters are all in desperate situations, and each one is reacting differently. There is a lot of story left to tell, and I’m interested to see how this plays out. Not quite riveted, but interested. There may be more going on under the surface than I was expecting!

Good, different

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This is YA in the best of ways and by that I mean the characters are young but they are just people, not stereotypes. In fact really the age of the characters didn't come into play very much at all. The story is fantastic and very satisfying. This writing style reminded a bit of John Christophers (try-pod series) and Heinline's early YA space dramas.

The story is about two generational ships heading to a new colony planet. One of the ships is unable to have children so they want children from the other ship. The world building is really interesting and fleshed out and the story pacing is great.

My only complaint is that there are not more books in the series.

The narration is fantastic.

I SO wish there were more science fiction ya books like this! I will be listening to and reading everything I can find by this author.

YA Science Fiction without the Stereotypes!!!

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The ending ruined it for me. Really? I won't ruin it for others but I will tell you this. I am not interested in buying the next book.

Meh

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What started off as a promising story turned into a confused battle between young and old, good and evil, religion and secularism, men and women, the fertile versus the barren, sexual perverts and the chaste. Unfortunately, all the battles were going on at the same time. I know that young adult literature often portrays adults as flat, unfeeling characters. But a bigger bunch of idiots I don't think I've met in a long time as the adult crew of the good ship Empyrean. I had little sympathy for the lemming like adults who were sucked out of the cargo bay air hatch while trying to fight off an attacking space vessel with pitchforks and garden tools. And since all the good but possibly evil adults were dead and only the evil potentially good adults were alive, it seems impossible that most of the questions raised in the book will ever be answered.

And the children, the boys and the girls, so divided throughout most of the book, had miraculous powers to fly space shuttles and repair ships systems even though most of them spent their days working in the gardens.

Part of the problem was the narrator. She made all the barren fanatics on the bad ship New Horizon sound like Steppford people.

A caution, for others like me who prefer not to have religious themes hidden in the back cover copy, there is a strong religious, overtly christian, story line that gets stronger as the story moves forward. I don't know where it is headed but it was too much for me.

I will be skipping the rest of the series

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