Ashfall prophecy

Pittacus Lore

Book - 2022

We have waited generations for you... Syd Chambers knows that there's life on other planets because he's descended from it. His father was from a distant world called Denza and has been missing - presumed dead - for years. When Syd discovers a device his father left behind that shows not only that he's alive, but where he is, Syd must set out on a mission of his own. But along the way, he discovers a deadly, unbearable secret that could destroy Denza, Earth, and the universe.

Saved in:
Subjects
Genres
Young adult fiction
Science fiction
Action and adventure fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Pittacus Lore (author, -)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Sequel to: Ashfall legacy.
Physical Description
375 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 13 up.
Grades 10-12.
ISBN
9780062845399
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The fates of Earth and the intergalactic community alike come to hang in the balance amid visions of doom in this middle volume. Picking up without a recap where Ashfall Legacy (2021) left off, half-human Syd and his multispecies squad of allies, reluctant and otherwise, flee but are ultimately forced to turn and face Capt. Reno and her associates. They, being full humans and therefore superstrong and (so they think) invulnerable everywhere except on Earth, violently believe that they are destined to rule rather than being genocidally wiped out. Even readers fresh from the opener may have trouble picking up the basic premise and the backstory, but that doesn't really matter as the pseudonymous authors stick to an easy-to-follow "spaceship chases and captures with occasional explosions in a pint-sized universe" sort of plot and give a cast featuring aliens diverse enough to include sentient gas and fungus plenty of chances to exchange banter and values. All of the actual agency continues to come from human or part-human characters who are, notwithstanding an impassive one with a Japanese name, uniformly White-presenting. A climactic battle leaves the human supremacist party at least neutralized, but thanks to an enigmatic space monster's "flickering whorls of temporal energy," troubling glimpses of a future Syd destroying a planet that looks a lot like ours leaves some unfinished business for sequels to settle. More stabs, grabs, and snarky confabs, with rising stakes to push readers on. (Science fiction. 13-17) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.