“And this one fact seemed to point to other facts and others still: Love frays and humans fail, time passes, eras end.” - Karen Thomas Walker, The Age of Miracles
It took me forever to finish this book, and to be honest, I don't really know why. But now I'm here to tell you my opinion.
It took me forever to finish this book, and to be honest, I don't really know why. But now I'm here to tell you my opinion.
The main character,
Julia, is twelve years old girl like any others. She has plenty of teenage
problems that she has to faces. To choose the right shape of bra, deal with her
other, prettier classmates and, of course, her first love Seth Moren, who
barely knows she exist. Her best friend no longer talks to her, her beloved
grandfather disappeared, his dad is cheating on her mom with Julia's piano
teacher. Her life can be consider to tragedy. But all this is just background
of the biggest catastrophe that can possible happen to human race.
In the beginning it
looks like every other day. But it's not. The Earth is spinning more and
more slowly. Days are longer, night are longer and people are separated to two
groups. Those, who recognize old time, meaning: One day is equal to 24
hours. This group also include Julia and her parents. And then there are those
who recognize the new time. Meaning: Days re longer, night are longer and
finally the day and night lasts a whopping 72 hours! Those people think that
their bodies will adapts. But soon both groups will find out, that none of
these works.
Funny, sad,
interesting, savvy and sassy dystopian story about world we don't know anything
about.
In the end, you need to think about the book
for a while. At the beginning you say: "What the heck? This is the book I
spend my money for? No, thanks." Trust me when I say, more you think about
the story, more you love it.
Yes, Julia is annoying
at the times, she thinks that she ate all the wisdom of the world, doesn't
really know about what's going on around her and the biggest catastrophe for
her is her unrequited love, but tell me, who twelve years old girl is not like
that?
I think, that author
could make Julia little older, but in the end is still doesn't matter. Every
character is special and interesting in their own way. Mother, whose acting
career only includes shampoo commercials, father, gynecologist, who loves both
of them, but just want more, grandfather who always talk just about his two
years in Alaska, and is getting ready for end of the World, best friend who
left, then came back, pretending Julia doesn't exist or little girl who fell in
love with a boy on the Internet.
While I was reading
the book I had mixed feelings. There were parts where I couldn't take my eyes
off the pages, and then there were parts where I preferred to put the book away.
But that doesn't mean the book wasn't good. Or that it was just good.
Like the book says:
"An unforgettable novel about growing up in the background of completely
changed world"
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