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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A page-turner that hits close to home,
By Teenreads.com (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Streams of Babel (Hardcover)
In Carol Plum-Ucci's all-too-realistic nightmarish tale set in 2002, several teen characters narrate their experiences as terrorism targets a small town.
Seventeen-year-old Cora Holman's mother is a drug addict, so Cora isn't entirely shocked when she dies. Aleese wouldn't be the first addict to overdose, and both mother and daughter have been sick with the flu. Cora is still humiliated, though --- even moreso when one of the paramedics responding to her call is her neighbor, Scott Eberman. Scott is young and good-looking; his brother, Owen, is in Cora's class at school. Another neighbor, popular Rain Steckerman's father, who happens to be a supervisor in the USIC (United States Intelligence Coalition), also shows up. Scott mentions that his mother is also sick with the flu. He insists that Cora come over to his house to recuperate. Cora, however, refuses. She crawls into bed after the ambulance removes her mother's body, left with her usual resentful thoughts about her mother, complicated by Aleese's death. Cora had been raised by her grandmother while Aleese traveled the world as a freelance photographer. When Aleese injured her arm, she had returned home. Cora's grandmother died, but Cora and Aleese had never grown close, partly because Aleese had been addled by her morphine addiction. Cora did not even learn who or where her father might be. The central mystery of Cora's life is why her mother had never loved her. How could Aleese leave her daughter for so long? Owen Eberman, meanwhile, has become sick. But he is not nearly as ill as his mother, who is suffering from a horrid headache. His mother is determined to drown her flu by guzzling gallons of tap water. Owen's good friend, Rain Steckerman, shows up. She, too, is suffering from flu symptoms, so Owen, Rain and Mrs. Eberman sit drinking water and watching a movie. But suddenly Mrs. Eberman requests that she be taken to the hospital. Her headache is worse, and her nose has begun to bleed. At the hospital, her paramedic son Scott discusses the possibilities with Mr. Steckerman, who reassures him that it's a coincidence that his mother and Aleese both suffered the same flu symptoms and bled through their noses. Yet, it is unusual for Steckerman to be at the hospital, and he admits that he is sending information to the Centers for Disease Control. Scott realizes Steckerman is eliminating the possibility that this strange illness could be caused by terrorists. And, although the USIC tested the water in their small town, Trinity Falls, and found it clean, Scott can't help suspecting the water his mother drank by the gallon. Steckerman also mentions they have experts watching terrorists the world over --- including a 16-year-old computer hacker in Pakistan who has been invaluable to U.S. intelligence. In fact, the young Pakistani informant has captured suspicious chat room dialogue, which seems to imply poisoned water somewhere. Shahzad Hamdani, the young Pakistani computer hacker, picks up the story, even as Scott Eberman's mother dies in the hospital. At his uncle's computer cafe in a tiny village, Shahzad sits at a terminal spying on terrorists. His dangerous quest becomes even more hazardous when USIC officials decide to send him to America, where he believes the terrorists are carrying out their poisoned water mission. Can Shahzad help U.S. intelligence agents discover their targets soon enough to save them? Can the extremists be stopped? Carol Plum-Ucci handles a huge cast of characters skillfully, making each well-rounded, individual and true-to-life. Consider young Tyler Ping, who enters late in the story. Tyler eats pills and hacks computers. He is bullied at school and yearns for his mother to act like she cares for him (Tyler's mother is distracted because of her shocking double life). And, although he's only been in the U.S. a year, he's completely fluent in English because "Words don't hate me like people do." Those sympathetic teens, plus the urgency of STREAMS OF BABEL's almost too frightening and realistic plot, make this book a gripping page-turner. Readers will feel compelled to immediately read to the end to learn how it all plays out. --- Reviewed by Terry Miller Shannon
5.0 out of 5 stars
Why has this title gone out of print?,
By
This review is from: Streams of Babel (Hardcover)
It's interesting that such a well-written page-turner would go out of print so quickly. Might it have something to do with the fact that it's one of the few books for kids that presents a positive view of the U.S. government's anti-terrorism efforts post 9/11? My only fault with the book is that its stand-in for the Department of Homeland Security operates almost faultlessly, with no red tape or bureaucratic snafus, when the reality at any government agency is sadly different.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A fine story of biological suspense,
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Streams of Babel (Hardcover)
When Cora's mother dies, Cora assumes her mother overdosed on painkillers taken for years - and is shocked to learn a neighbor also died of a brain aneurysm the same night. And when Cora and her friends become ill with a mysterious flu thereafter and officials arrive in her small town, a terrorist attack is suspected in this fine story of biological suspense.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
another great one by Plum-Ucci,
By
This review is from: Streams of Babel (Hardcover)
Streams of Babel is a page-turning, great teen read about a topic that unfortunately is no longer a threat of the future - bioterrorism. Both boys and girls will enjoy this book, and it would be of particular interest to students savvy with computers. Two of the main characters of the book are teen hackers, and in some areas of the country, their abilities may seem far-fetched, but having worked closely with teens in this county, I found these characters very believable. The chapters alternate between the character perspectives and often leave the reader hanging, which lends to the quick-read factor.
The interaction between the characters also makes the story very appealing, as it involves the popular set of teens being thrown in with the school outcast through their contraction of the "flu" (water contamination). I'm not sure if I liked the ending, as it didn't end with the expected "the bad guys get caught", but rather, it ended very realistically. There was closure to the story, but it could definitely be followed by a sequel - which would be a good thing. Although this is a larger novel, there really isn't anything in the way of sex, and the bad language and violence are really minimal. It is more the topic that is of a mature nature; therefore, I think this would be a great option for mature middle school readers, but perhaps with parental notification of the topic. After I finished this book, I loaned it to a neighbor, who is a sophomore and an avid reader - she could not put this book down. She literally stayed up one evening until 3:00 a.m. reading. :) |
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Streams of Babel by Carol Plum-Ucci (Hardcover - May 1, 2008)
$17.00 $13.26
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