Life As We Knew It By Susan Beth Pfeffer
Gr 6-8-Pfeffer tones down the terror, but otherwise
crafts a frighteningly plausible account of the local effects of a
near-future worldwide catastrophe. The prospect of an asteroid hitting
the Moon is just a mildly interesting news item to Pennsylvania teenager
Miranda, for whom a date for the prom and the personality changes in
her born-again friend, Megan, are more immediate concerns. Her
priorities undergo a radical change, however, when that collision
shifts the Moon into a closer orbit, causing violent earthquakes,
massive tsunamis, millions of deaths, and an upsurge in volcanism.
Thanks to frantic preparations by her quick-thinking mother, Miranda's
family is in better shape than many as utilities and public services
break down in stages, wild storms bring extremes of temperature, and
outbreaks of disease turn the hospital into a dead zone. In Miranda's
day-by-day journal entries, however, Pfeffer keeps nearly all of the
death and explicit violence offstage, focusing instead on the stresses
of spending months huddled in increasingly confined quarters, watching
supplies dwindle, and wondering whether there will be any future to make
the effort worthwhile. The author provides a glimmer of hope at the
end, but readers will still be left stunned and thoughtful.-John Peters,
New York Public Library
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