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Plague 99 de Jean Ure
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Plague 99 (edició 2014)

de Jean Ure (Autor)

Sèrie: Plague (1)

MembresRessenyesPopularitatValoració mitjanaMencions
1175232,826 (3.42)41
Three teenagers attempt to survive on their own when a devastating plague sweeps London.
Membre:LovingLit
Títol:Plague 99
Autors:Jean Ure (Autor)
Informació:Hachette Children's (2014), 160 pages
Col·leccions:2021, La teva biblioteca
Valoració:***1/2
Etiquetes:2021, pandemic, London, dystopia, survival, YA, epidemic

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Plague de Jean Ure

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Es mostren totes 5
I read this in early April, when the UK was in lockdown because of COVID-19. I had a hazy memory of it from when I was a teenager, and thought it might be an interesting book to read during a pandemic.

This book is dark. And heavy. I'm not sure reading it was a great choice. Nearly everyone has died, very rapidly. Children have watched kid siblings die, and nursed their parents to the vile end. The hero comes home from an off-grid school trip, and finds the bodies of her parents rotting upstairs. The book covers a very short period of time - after the plague has already mostly happened, but in the first few days while the survivors try to deal with the emotional impact. So there are glints of hope, but the ending - our two heroes leaving London with no real idea of where to go or what will happen next, and only managing to escape because the checkpoint soldier has died at his post - is definitely not hugs and puppies and the cavalry saving the day.

It's interesting, it contains lots of elements that I would have thought of as 'modern' young adult. One protagonist is muslim, and dealing with the issues of wanting to fit in at school while his family pressures him to conform to their rules and religion. Or would do, if they weren't all dead in a plague. It's also got a very environmentalist 'well, this is probably all our own fault, I bet we made this plague when messing around with biological weapons, and we shouldn't all trust the government, we should live in smaller communities and take more responsibility for ourselves.'

But it does model how to be human in impossible times. Fran stays and nurses Shahid through the plague, even though it feels pointless. She keeps going one day at a time, and she writes her journal. 'I'm asking you to have the will to go on, that's all'. ( )
  atreic | Apr 7, 2020 |
[b:Come Lucky April|2148588|Come Lucky April (Plague 99, #2)|Jean Ure|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1194457187s/2148588.jpg|345222] was one of the first post-apocalyptic novels I ever read as a child and it started a love affair - but I never found the prequel. Now, as an adult with a job and access to secondhand books on the internet, I found it!

And it's... ok. Kid-me would have enjoyed it a lot more. The setup feels a bit cliched now: Fran comes back from a wilderness camp and finds (almost) everyone has succumbed to a flu-like plague. Her best friend Harriet has basically had a psychotic break and is super-annoying and useless ( but I actually liked that, in the sense that uber-competent teenagers can stretch belief in some books). They also meet a classmate, Shahid, who for all his criticism of Harriet is probably also not coping with the situation in the best possible way ( watching TV all day until the broadcast cuts out, while his father dies slowly in the next room and the bodies of the rest of his family rot in another bedroom ).

The setting is very British, and there's some monologing about the power of the government and secret conspiracies. Nothing much happens to the three of them - there's no gang violence or close-up death or mad cults. They don't really struggle to find food or water. (There is a mention of Fran having to scavenge some tampons - yay for authors who address the Period Problem). And there's not a satisfying conclusion, just the decision to keep going and keep living for as long as they can.

Which is a bit like regular life, really. ( )
1 vota a-shelf-apart | Nov 19, 2019 |
This book gave a fairly simplified version of the immediate aftermath of an apocalyptic event. I thought the author did a very good job of showing the lack of information available to the characters following the breakdown of government and communication systems. The detachment felt by the characters who lived through the epidemic was also portrayed well. ( )
  SylviaC | Mar 28, 2012 |
This is the first of the reviews of the books in this series; in the next two days I will review the other two.

While a plague that wipes out mankind is a common theme in science fiction for adults, this is one of the few that deals with that theme for juveniles. It is also unique because it deals with an outbreak in one city - London - and deals with the immediate crises that result. We do not know what the rest of the world must deal with and this gives the book an interesting intensity. The main character, Fran, returns from a camping trip to find London blocked off and quarantined. She manages to get in and finds two people, her friend Harriet and a stranger named Shahid, who become her companions. The isolation is complete - London has no power and most phones are dead. They speculate about the nature of the plague, but until you read the sequel you don't know what it really was like. This is what makes the book effective and a standout book in the genre.
  sister_ray | Jan 7, 2008 |
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Three teenagers attempt to survive on their own when a devastating plague sweeps London.

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