From School Library Journal
Grade 6-9 In an all-too-familiar scenario, the United States' "honor" is at stake in a dispute with a small South American nation. Nuclear missiles are armed and ready to be launched if negotiators cannot reach an agreement. This book explores how two teenagers face the possibility of nuclear annihilation. Meredith draws closer to her family. She wants to survive and even feels an inexplicable urge to have a babysomehow to ensure species survival. She is horrified when her boyfriend, Barry, alienated and insecure, tells her that he would commit suicide if the bomb fell. But over the weekend, as the world waits to see if it will be destroyed, Barry meets an old woman who is struggling to create an urban park in the middle of a slum. Her commitment sparks a feeling of self-worth in Barry, and he realizes that he wants to live as much as Meredith does. Fortunately, the negotiations are successful, and war is averted. While the characters are somewhat bland, and Barry's realization that life is worth living comes too suddenly, this thought-provoking novel is a useful addition to nuclear-disaster fiction. The anti-nuclear message is obvious but not overwhelming, and readers who would otherwise avoid this depressing topic may be attracted by Hall's comparatively light touch. Anne Connor, Los Angeles Public Library
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Product Description
As an escalating world crisis makes the threat of nuclear warfare imminent, teenage Meredith and her boyfriend Barry draw closer to each other and to other people important to them during what could be the last weekend of their lives.







