The Effort
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Narrated by:
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Jay Ben Markson
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By:
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Claire Holroyde
When dark comet UD3 was spotted near Jupiter's orbit, its existence was largely ignored. But to individuals who knew better -- scientists like Benjamin Schwartz, manager of NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies -- the threat this eight-kilometer comet posed to the survival of the human race was unthinkable. The 150-million-year reign of the dinosaurs ended when an asteroid impact generated more than a billiontimes the energy of an atomic bomb.
What would happen to Earth's seven billion inhabitants if a similar event were allowed to occur?
Ben and his indomitable girlfriend Amy Kowalski fly to South America to assemble an international counteraction team, whose notable recruits include Love Mwangi, a UN interpreter and nomad scholar, and Zhen Liu, an extraordinary engineer from China's national space agency. At the same time, on board a polar icebreaker life continues under the looming shadow of comet UD3. Jack Campbell, a photographer for National Geographic, works to capture the beauty of the Arctic before it is gone forever. Gustavo Wayãpi, a Nobel Laureate poet from Brazil, struggles to accept the recent murder of his beloved twin brother. And Maya Gutiérrez, an impassioned marine biologist is -- quite unexpectedly -- falling in love for the first time.
Together, these men and women must fight to survive in an unknown future with no rules and nothing to be taken for granted. They have two choices: neutralize the greatest threat the world has ever seen (preferably before mass hysteria hits or world leaders declare World War III) or come to terms with the annihilation of humanity itself.
Their mission is codenamed The Effort.
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Critic reviews
"Page-turner of the year! In the grand tradition of Stephen King's The Stand, Pat Frank's Alas, Babylon, and J.T. McIntosh's One in Three Hundred, this book is the story of a massive comet that threatens to end human existence and those who fight to prevent that catastrophe. Call it a techno-thriller, call it apocalyptic fiction -- I call it great writing. This is an important and provocative novel, one that should be read by all who care about the future of the planet and humanity's role in its preservation. Claire Holroyde is an exciting new voice in modern fiction, and we're lucky to have this stirring and fully imagined book."—David Heska Wanbli Weiden, Author of Winter Counts
"Claire Holroyde's The Effort artfully mirrors an allegorical warning on the state of our planet's climate with a more imminent threat of complete and total annihilation of the human species. It speeds up the doomsday clock -- that's ticking relentlessly on every page -- but with a lingering and aching glimpse at everything that's about to be lost. Heart-pounding and heart wrenching all at once, it's ultimately, somehow, a story of immense hope. Just a stunning debut."—Jane Gilmartin, Author of The Mirror Man
"[Claire Holroyde's] prose is measured and clear, and the plot arcs nicely from the scientific issues to more personal stakes. An adept contribution to the realm of apocalypse fiction."—Kirkus Reviews
"Twisty . . . Holroyde displays a keen vision of societal and diplomatic breakdown amid imminent disaster. The deeper themes about human nature make this apocalyptic thriller more than escapist reading."—Publishers Weekly
"A solid debut novel from Claire Holroyde, reminiscent of the movies Deep Impact and Armageddon . . . You won’t want to put the book down."—Red Carpet Crash
"The Effort, in the tradition of science fiction novels past, manages to sweep aside national, sectarian, and governmental boundaries to . . . offer a glimmer of hope. It serves as a small, miraculous contrast to a world which, for the most part, simply folds its wings like [an] eagle and sinks when threatened with space debris, or with its own consumption patterns . . . Do we die with a bang, with a whimper, or both? Or do we find some way to live? The Effort suggests maybe all three at once."—Observer
"The Effort offers a vision for how humanity could avoid an existential crisis with international collaboration, while also highlighting the environmental threats created by humans."—Electric Literature
Medium.
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Positives: Overall, ok story. Narrator isn't too bad. I super, super appreciated that the author placed the main events around the current time and didn't go wild making up "alternate history" stuff for the current period. Like, Trump is clearly Trump and we're clearly living in the 2018-2020 era. And by that, imagine a comet is going to hit us sometime while Trump was president. Yes, we would really be doomed and its not really any better in the book.
Negatives: Its a pretty predictable plot. There have been 101 books about asteroids/comets threatening to hit, society suddenly loosing its collective mind, etc. Kinda rote plot points by now. And this story basically hits most of them. To be sure, there are lots of likable characters in here. But after dealing with everyone somehow not being rational scientists and people for the last 2/3 of the book, it wore pretty thin. The story could have been thinned down quite a lot and I think it would have been much more impactful.
I haven't listened to this narrator before. Kind hit or miss. Again, not a bad narrator but not fantastic. He has some range in terms of character voices, but almost all of them ultimately have the same basic monotone going on. It becomes really apparent after hour six or so. Hope the narrator is able to get some more books and work on improving the energy and range of the character voices he does.
To conclude, I can't exactly recommend this book but I can't talk too badly about it. Again, its not a bad story but the topic is somewhat worn thin these days and this book doesn't add anything to the genre. Narrator isn't bad but needs some refining.
Not great, not bad
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Alot of flash forwards
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Believable apocalypse
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good but wanted more
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