Island of the sun

Matthew J. Kirby, 1976-

Book - 2016

Desperately searching for the other Concentrators that are fatally disrupting Earth's orbit, Eleanor and her companions are labeled as terrorists by G.E.T. forces that would eliminate all but a few select people.

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Review by Booklist Review

In The Arctic Code (2015), Eleanor bested the Concentrators located in the Arctic, creating the new Ice Age. Her quest, though, is far from over. Picking up immediately after the events of the first book, this sequel finds Eleanor, her mother, Dr. Powers and his sons, and the pilot, Luke, branded terrorists and on the run from the Global Energy Trust (GET). Aided by Luke's friend Betty, they flee Alaska and head to Lake Titicaca, determined to locate the other Concentrators and shut them down. Despite a startling betrayal, Eleanor manages to shut down another Concentrator, and the group narrowly escapes GET as they head to Egypt. Here the Concentrator is more alive, remembering thousands of years of torture, and Eleanor will face greater challenges than ever. This sets up seamlessly for the next installment, and, as with book one, the nonstop action is sure to keep readers enthralled.--Roush, Suanne Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-6-The intrigue and excitement continue in this dystopian sequel. Twelve-year-old Eleanor and her companions have been branded terrorists by GET (Global Energy Trust) for destroying the energy-producing Arctic Concentrator and must leave the frozen North pronto. Educated by Eleanor's mysterious powers, the group have come to believe that a rogue alien planet is using the strange, twisted contraption to rob Earth of its energy. Their aim is not only to shut down the Arctic machine but to proceed to Peru, Egypt, and the Himalayas, where other concentrators are known to exist. They intend to save the increasingly freezing Earth and all its inhabitants. GET's Preservation Protocol plan is more selective: only a chosen few will be allowed to survive, while millions of others will perish. On the way to Peru, Eleanor is witness to a preview of this possible outcome: Mexico City is awash with refugees living in squalor, while others, protected by armed guards and walls, live a privileged existence. Readers will be carried along in this page-turning tale that ends on a cliffhanger. Kirby keeps the plot moving with hair-raising adventures involving reanimated mummies and underwater temples. VERDICT A thrilling story sure to keep adventure lovers on the edge of their seats.-Diane McCabe, John Muir Elementary, Santa Monica, CA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

With the all-powerful Global Energy Trust hot on the trail, this sequel to The Arctic Code (2015) finds Eleanor and her ragtag band of allies mounting assaults on more of the alien devices that are rapidly forcing Earth into an ice age by sucking up its "telluric energy." Eluding armed G.E.T. agents as they go, the fugitives leave Alaska's deep freeze behind to fly south toward Lake Titicacapausing, in an ironic touch, to gape at Mexico City's massive sprawl of refugees from icy North America. The eldritch Concentrator is buried at a nexus of ley lines deep within submerged Incan ruins, and reaching it so that Eleanor can mentally kill the artificial intelligence that operates it isn't going to be easy. Nor, for that matter, will escaping afterward, as betrayal leaves some group members in G.E.T. hands. Next stop: Luxor, another Concentrator, and another narrow escape. The author shoehorns in so much continuing conflict between Eleanor and her overprotective mother (both white), and also between another scientist and his two biracial sons (black/white), that the story often seems more about parent-child issues than saving the planet. Still, as Eleanor leads the way toward the Himalayas and a possibly climactic attack on the last and most powerful Concentrator, she'll plainly be facing a new cascade of deadly dangers and soul-wrenching choices. A baroque premise fuels a reasonably adventuresome middle volume. (Science fiction/fantasy hybrid. 11-13) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.