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The Doomsday Box (2010)

by Herbie Brennan(Favorite Author)
3.86 of 5 Votes: 3
ISBN
0061756474 (ISBN13: 9780061756474)
languge
English
publisher
Balzer + Bray
series
Shadow Project
review 1: I grabbed this book from the teen section of my local library because I was tired of seedy adult stuff. To be honest, this book wasn't that great. Note, I have not read the first one... nor will I (EDIT: okay, due to certain criticisms I received through this review, I have since read book one, The Shadow Project. Nevertheless, I still agree with everything I have said in this, my review of The Doomsday Box one hundred percent). I'm still trying to understand why any government would want to hire teenagers for a top-secret crime-fighting organization. According to the book, "only teenagers could be Shadow Project operatives because they had minds that were open enough for the sort of espionage the Shadow Project did,..." An open mind? Seriously? If that's all it ta... morekes why wasn't I drafted when I was a teen? Also, from what I recall, you don't necessarily need special abilities to join the Shadow Project because they use a special machine to help your spirit-self leave your physical body and walk through walls to solve mysteries and stuff. True, one can eventually learn to do this without the machine. Ultimately, however, there are no job requirements involved other than 1, you must be a teenager and 2, you must have an open mind. Ridiculous.To be fair, the character, Fuscia, had a special ability of precognition. Unfortunately, she was absolutely the most annoying character I've ever encountered in a book. Michael was almost just as bad. I mean, Michael didn't do a thing through this entire book. I think he got tortured once but that was really his only contribution. Also, what is up with the name, Opal? I mean, is she a 90 year-old shut-in or a spunky teenager with an open mind?I give this book two stars, however, because I liked the whole time travel thing and the references to old conspiracy theories and the adventure in trying to stop a fierce plague from sweeping the earth. And though I felt like the story started to fizzle as soon as they got to Russia, it picked up again once they found Cobra.
review 2: I read this book first, before it's predecessor, The Shadow Project. It's the first time a book sent me on a mission to finds it's prequel. Turns out this is even better thant he first book, all the suspence and pace with none of the confusion.The three teens from the first book are joined by a new member, Fuchsia, with a new power, one she is still developing. The four British teens working for MI6 find their way from Britain to New York where they are to investigate a long-forgotten CIA experiment in time travel, one that never really died. Seems you can rip a hole in the space-time continuum, but you can't put it back together again even when you shut off the power. Just as the teen Shadow Project crew determine there is no danger at the site of the rip, danger appears, in the form of a box a military man opens to unleash a virulent plague, one that kills in less than a day and leaves billions at risk unless the kids, who have been vaccinated, go through the rip into 1962 to stop the man who will eventually unleash that plague on the 21st century. The catch - that man is a CIA agent who doesn't know what he will do in the future. The other catch - if they can't persuade him they have to kill him.The kids end up back in the height of the cold war, travel to Russia, and end up captured and interrogated by the KGB and a pair of torturing twins you never want to meet in a dark alley. Young readers will see the height of the Cold War for the first time, older readers will revisit the dark days before the Cuban Missile Crisis, and see an alternate scenario that would have plunged the world into nuclear war before those dark days in October. One member of the Shadow Project team is an African prince, and he gets to see a touch of 1962 racism as well. Fuchsia’s developing power reveals that the 21st century plague they were sent to stop has to take second place to a nuclear holocaust due to begin in weeks and plunge the world into an alternate future in which they and billions more are dead.It’s a high-stakes story, a true cross-over book, one that middle grade, young adult and adult readers will all enjoy. less
Reviews (see all)
gracielove1
It was really good it makes a good sequeal and was just as good as the first one
Bleh
More confusing than the first, but also better. I thought it was pretty good.
Zhai
Nice time-travel/spy novel. Not too heavy.
Bragar
A better sequel... very hard to find.
luby
PG for violence.
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