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Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Shelf Number | Status |
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Searching... Avon-Washington Township Public Library | Teen Fiction Book Hardback | 120791002902291 | T GEI | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
With natural disasters and nuclear war threatening their small town, two twin brothers find themselves enraptured by mysterious music that could change the course of their lives.
Everyone in Clade City knows their days are numbered. The Great Cascadia Earthquake will destroy their hometown and reshape the entire West Coast--if they survive long enough to see it. Nuclear war is increasingly likely. Wildfires. Or another pandemic. To Griff, the daily forecast feels partly cloudy with a chance of apocalyptic horsemen.
Griff's brother, Leo, and the Lost Coast Preppers claim to be ready. They've got a radio station. Luminous underwater monitors. A sweet bunker, and an unsettling plan for "disaster-ready rodents." But Griff's more concerned about what he can do before the end times. He'd like to play in a band, for one. Hopefully with Charity Simms. Her singing could make the whole world stop.
When Griff, Leo, and Charity stumble upon a mysterious late-night broadcast, one song changes everything. It's the best band they've ever heard--on a radio signal even the Preppers can't trace. They vow to find the music, but aren't prepared for where their search will take them. Or for what they'll risk, when survival means finding the one thing you cannot live without.
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 8 Up--Seventeen-year-old Griffin Tripp did not expect to find something as hauntingly beautiful as the music in his small coastal community of Clade City. He just wanted to be part of the band with his controlling twin brother Leo, his best friend Thomas, and especially his summertime crush, Charity Simms. However, when their obsession to find the source of the music, and the band playing it, turns to tragedy, Griff has to decide for himself what is truly important--sinking into his community's doomsday prepper lifestyle or rising up and discovering what living really means. His journey will lead him to discover the power of music, loss, love, and life but it may also lead him to destruction. There is a lot going on in this book and it takes its time to get to the action. It is divided into three musical parts: an Overture, Andante, and Scherzo. The narrative mirrors these three divisions, which hinders the pace of the story. That said, there is a great deal of compelling character development that takes place during these parts. It is during the Scherzo that the action and the characters coalesce; new, diverse, and interesting characters are introduced and the story reaches a relatively satisfying ending, though some readers might wish a few elements of the conclusion had been more fleshed out. Griff, Leo, and Thomas are white, and Charity is Dominican and Black. VERDICT This story, with its slow start but a satisfactory payoff, will find an audience in teens with a sense of wanderlust and an itch for adventure.--Erik Knapp, Davis Lib., Plano, TX
Publisher's Weekly Review
With an ambitious plotline and nuanced characters, Geiger's (Wildman) novel begins as a tense love triangle before veering into a grief-tinged mystery. Like many of the men in coastal Oregon's Clade City, the site of a devastating 1964 tsunami, white 17-year-old twins Griff and Leo Tripp are preppers, spending their free time preparing for a tsunami, nuclear attack, or whatever potential disaster awaits. Normally close, the Tripp siblings' relationship begins to fray as Griff develops feelings for new classmate Charity, a talented singer who is Black and Dominican. Having formed a band with Charity, the twins and fellow prepper Thomas hear an exhilarating musical broadcast picked up on a stray radio frequency. As Leo and Charity begin to investigate the musical puzzle, Griff interprets his ominous feeling of doom as certainty that his charismatic brother will steal Charity's heart, as occurred with a previous crush. Though the writing's intentionally fractured style threatens to scramble the story's momentum, patience pays off in this richly detailed mystery about the terrible catastrophes that even the most ardent prepper cannot anticipate. Ages 14--up. Agent: Sara Crowe, Pippin Properties. (July)
Kirkus Review
A young man struggles to be his true self against a backdrop of looming natural disasters in this contemporary novel. Seventeen-year-old Griff is an introverted, thoughtful, and talented pianist who is used to being sidelined by his self-assured twin brother, Leo, who has more than once gone after girls he is interested in. Griff's feelings come to a head when he falls hard for Charity, with whom he, Leo, and their goofball friend, Thomas, start a band after unexpectedly running into her at a concert. The fictional Oregon community where they live was decimated by a tsunami in the 1960s. The brothers' participation in the Lost Coast Preppers, a group that works to develop warning systems and disaster plans, includes involvement with a radio station, an element that ties into an interesting, if at times confusing, plotline about the source of a mysterious signal they pick up. Lyrically told in the third person over three parts, this tale of first love, music, grief, and identity takes unexpected turns. Meandering phrases and sentence fragments mesh effectively with the more whimsical elements, though the style doesn't work as well in some of the action-oriented passages. Most major characters are White; Charity is Dominican and Black. An occasionally muddled but earnest and original coming-of-age story. (Fiction. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
In the post-pandemic near future, four teens teeter between enjoying the moment and preparing for future disaster, until a personal tragedy illuminates what is truly important. The coastal town of Clade City is home to serious survivalists, preparing for the Great Big One, the tsunami that will wipe out the West Coast. Sixteen-year-old Griff doesn't fit in with that scene; he'd rather play piano, dream about skipping town, and crush on Charity. His twin, Leo, shares and competes with him in everything, musical and romantic endeavors included. When they discover an unknown band playing incredible music on a mysterious AM channel, their efforts to find the source lead to disaster--not the Great Big One, but for Griff, just as shattering. Geiger's staccato, enigmatic sentence fragments are stylistically interesting and poetic, but, once the teens find the band, the ensuing section of surreal desert shenanigans doesn't quite mesh with the rest of the narrative. Still, this sophomore novel is a moving, bittersweet examination of the search for a meaningful signal in the noise after a death.