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The boy at the end of the world  Cover Image Book Book

The boy at the end of the world / Greg van Eekhout.

Van Eekhout, Greg. (Author).

Summary:

"In a future world, Fisher is the last boy on earth. But evidence suggests there may be a far-away survival bunk with other humans. In order to get there, he'll need to rely on a ragtag team he assembles, including a robot, a mammoth, and a prairie dog with basic English skills."--From publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781599909189 (2012 pbk.) :
  • ISBN: 9781599905242 (hc.)
  • ISBN: 1599905248 (hc.)
  • Physical Description: 212 p. ; 22 cm.
  • Edition: 1st U.S. ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Bloomsbury, 2011.

Content descriptions

Target Audience Note:
Grades: 5-7. SLJ.
Subject: Survival > Juvenile fiction.
Robots > Juvenie fiction.
Genre: Futuristic fiction, Juvenile.
Science fiction, Juvenile.
Fantasy fiction, juvenile

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at South Central Regional Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Winkler Library J F Van (Text) 35864001619301 Junior Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2011 May #2
    The author of Kid vs. Squid (2010) offers another quirky, high-stakes adventure hung about with oddball ideas and life-threatening hazards. The only human survivor of a mysterious attack on his huge underground "Ark," Fisher abruptly awakes from suspended animation and escapes to the surface—to discover that, many centuries after an ecological collapse, cities lie in ruins, humanity has vanished, and deadly predators like swarms of tiny crocodiles and elephant-sized parrots wait hungrily for unwary prey. Driven by hints that other Arks may lie far to the south and west, Fisher sets out with a damaged C-3PO–type robot and a surprisingly intelligent young mammoth for company and encounters terrifying challenges from a mad collective of nanobots to an equally dangerous colony of genetically altered technowarrior prairie dogs. Van Eekhout leaves some things, such as the origin of that initial attack, unexplained, but he moves his tale along briskly to a violent, suspenseful climax and supplies an Eve for his Adam at the end. A pleaser for readers who prefer their sf livened up with unpredictable elements and emotional complexity. Copyright 2011 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2011 Fall
    When Fisher looks out upon the world he has inherited, he sees ruins; his robot Click tells him, "Humans are no more." Fisher sets off in search of other people, heading across a landscape inhabited by piranha-crocs, giant prairie dogs, and carnivorous plants. His adventures, told in fast-paced prose and set in a boldly imagined future, will be exciting for young readers. Copyright 2011 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
  • Horn Book Magazine Reviews : Horn Book Magazine Reviews 2011 #4
    He awakes in a pod of bubbling gel, a plastic umbilical cord snaking from his belly. All the other pods in his Ark have been destroyed, and when Fisher looks out upon the world he has inherited, he sees ruins, the lofty achievements of mankind reduced to rubble. His robot Click tells him, "Humans are no more, Fisher. Except for you." Click has uploaded a "very intelligent personality module" for Fisher, his name indicating his specialty -- fishing. Had his Ark survived, Fisher would have been part of a community of intentionally designed humans, each imprinted with a personality that would contribute to the common good. The community would have survived the escalating ecological disasters of our world -- global warming, deforestation, a world covered in plastic and concrete. Instead, Fisher sets off in search of other Arks, hoping he is not the last human in the world. With Click and a young pygmy mammoth named Protein, Fisher heads out across a landscape inhabited by piranha-crocs, giant prairie dogs, and carnivorous animals and plants involved in a "biological arms race." The adventures of Fisher and Click, like those of Luke Skywalker, R2-D2, and C-3PO, told in fast-paced prose and set in a boldly imagined future, will be exciting for young readers who will, no doubt, gloss over the didactic environmental warnings and plunge on with Fisher's brave journey in a new world. dean Schneider Copyright 2011 Horn Book Magazine Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2011 May #2

    A boy, a robot and a mammoth struggle to survive after the apocalypse.

    Fisher "becomes born," as he thinks of it, out of a gel-filled pod in a destroyed Ark meant to preserve dozens of species along with human life after environmental cataclysm. He seems to have been endowed with a complete understanding of language and of his surroundings, and with, as he notes in awe, an awareness of hundreds of ways to catch fish: "I know all of them." He is accompanied by the somewhat damaged guardian robot Fisher christens Click and by a juvenile mammoth Fisher calls Protein (after deciding not to kill and eat the gentle giant...just yet). This trio makes its way across the North American continent in search of a second and finally a third Ark in order to help Fisher fulfill his mission of continuing the human species. Self-reinventing weaponry meant to defend each of the Arks leads to the destruction both of Fisher's birthplace and the Southern Ark, where an encounter with nano-technology is by turns hilarious and creepy. Part speculative fiction, part cinematic survival adventure, the novel features a brisk pace and clever and snappy dialogue.

    The real, scary possibility of human destruction of our own environment is tempered by this diverting tale of the possibilities of continued existence and the meaning of hope, friendship and community. (Science fiction. 8-12)

    Copyright Kirkus 2011 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Media Connection : Library Media Connection Reviews 2011 August/September
    Creating a disturbing glimpse into the future, Van Eekhout crafts a setting that does not bode well for the human race. It is into this environment that Fisher is "born." Coming from a pod that had sustained him in the hope that he and others could repopulate the earth, he learns that he is the only survivor in his Ark. Fisher finds support from a damaged robot, dubbed Click, and a pygmy mammoth he names "Protein." Together they journey in search of other humans while dodging "gadgets" that have evolved to hunt down humans and scavenge electronics. Gaining a new ally in a genetically engineered prairie dog, the last Ark is found before the gadgets can destroy it. Although Fisher is forced to bring about the destruction of Click, the novel resolves itself nicely with the hope that humanity might recover. The characters are well developed and the moral dilemmas are sound. This is an excellent beginning for science fiction readers and the study of dystopian society. Spencer Korson, Engl sh Teacher/Media Specialist, Bullock Creek High School, Midland, Michigan. RECOMMENDED ¬ 2011 Linworth Publishing, Inc.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2011 September

    Gr 5–7—"This is what he knew: His name was Fisher. The world was dangerous. He was alone." Thousands of years before, a dying civilization created the Life Ark and filled it with perfectly preserved genetic specimens so that one day human culture might rise again. But when Fisher awakens among the Ark's twisted, smoking ruins, he realizes that he is the only survivor except for a slightly off-kilter robot he calls Click. Its stated purpose is to help Fisher "continue existing," but its rather wonky programming is not always reliable. They find clues that the long-dead scientists may have planted more than one Ark. If they can find that other installation, there may be hope. However, evolution hasn't been idle, and nature and the terrain have changed in unexpected and dangerous ways. The cross-continent trek parallels Fisher's own journey toward realizing his humanity. The story is set in a fascinating and at times chillingly altered North America in which scattered relics of the pre-cataclysm era will seem hauntingly familiar to 21st-century readers. Robot Click is a surprisingly complex character, and his deadpan insights add a welcome touch of humor to the sometimes dark plot. With strong themes of courage and self-reliance, this challenging and thought-provoking adventure is a fine choice for science-fiction collections.—Elaine E. Knight, Lincoln Elementary Schools, IL

    [Page 174]. (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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