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Survival. Fiction.
Natural disasters. Fiction.
Diseases. Fiction.
Cruise ships. Fiction.
Mexican Americans. Fiction.
Gr 9 Up-Previously, in The Living (Delacorte, 2013), Shy Espinoza's cushy summer job aboard a cruise ship was short-lived. A tsunami sunk the luxury liner, and Shy survived harrowing moments at sea, after learning that some of the passengers were working for Laso Tech, an evil biotech company responsible for Romero's Disease, a deadly contagion ravaging Southern California. In this episode, Shy and three friends survive in a dinghy for a month with some stolen vials of the precious Romero's vaccine, only to wash ashore and see the California coast devastated. Leveled by earthquakes, Los Angeles is an apocalyptic wasteland of rotting corpses and fearful survivors unable to contain Romero's epidemic. Vigilantes patrol the streets looking for the ill to kill, and the healthy have few places to isolate themselves. Shy's friends Marcus, Carmen, and Shoeshine hope to make their way to Arizona where scientists can duplicate the vaccine samples and save the masses. It is a race against time as they dodge Laso Tech's henchmen and desperate citizens willing to kill to surviveoccasionally helped by a mysterious stranger on a motorcycle. Readers will be drawn to the raw and gritty setting, fast-moving plot, and diverse characters worth rooting for, such as Carmen, Shy's feisty Mexican coworker and romantic interest, and the philosophical Shoeshine, an older black man who sees Shy as more than just a resilient and steadfast kid, but a larger-than-life hero. VERDICT A more focused and linear sequel for fans of YA survival novels. Vicki Reutter, State University of New York at Cortland
ALA BooklistMore than a month after they set sail in a busted dinghy at the end of The Living (2013), Shy, Marcus, Carmen, and Shoeshine finally arrive at the California coast, only to discover incredible devastation wrought both by the earthquake and fever-pitch panic over Romero disease. Condemned buildings hold stacks of untouched rotting bodies, safety is prohibitively expensive, and roving gangs patrol the streets with the directive to shoot anyone trying to travel, which is bad news for Shy and his friends, who are determined to make it to Arizona with the remaining vaccines. De la Peña keeps up the frantic pace he set in The Living as the foursome treks through ruined towns and tries to outrun the mysterious SUVs on their tail. And all the while, in an effortlessly slang-inflected tone, Shy weighs his responsibilities, worries about whether he is brave enough, and considers what makes a hero. With a careful balance between fast-paced plot and meaningful, diverse character development, this is a great crossover for fans of both thrillers and more character-driven novels.
Voice of Youth AdvocatesThis sequel to The Living (Random House, 2013/VOYA December 2013) brings to an eventful conclusion the story of Shy Espinoza, a teen working on a summer cruise ship who accidentally learns that Romero disease, an Ebola-like pandemic, was an act of man, not God. A corrupt drug company, Laso Tech, had deliberately introduced the disease in the San Diego area, planning to quickly come to the rescue with their own patented cure. But then a giant earthquake and tsunami struck the California coast, and in the ensuing chaos, Laso Tech was unable to deliver the vaccine before thousands were fatally infected in the quake zone. The sequel opens with Shy and several fellow tsunami survivors landing their small boat on a beach near Los Angeles. Their self-appointed mission is to trek several hundred miles across a postapocalyptic landscape patrolled by rival gangs in order to deliver the chemical formula and samples of the Romero vaccine to the nearest operating laboratory . . . in Arizona. The Western postdisaster setting, improbable heroic mission, and shoot-'em-up road warrior action are in the tradition of science fiction cult classics like Damnation Alley, Escape from L.A., and The Book of Eli.Shy is an appealing and believable hero who realistically grows and matures. His self-reliance and skepticism of the wealthy and powerful serve him well as civil infrastructure and social institutions break down. His responses to a pair of socially superior girls he encounters also become more assured. Overall, this is a good survival adventure, once granting the improbable coincidence of earthquake and pandemic.Walter Hogan.
School Library Journal
ALA Booklist
Voice of Youth Advocates
Shy pulled his shirt off his head and stared in awe--they were close enough now that he could make out the devastation caused by the earthquakes. Buildings flattened. Abandoned cars half submerged in parking lots and drifting in the tide. Palm trees snapped in half, and sand caked through the streets. Everything charred black.
Makeshift tents had been erected on the rooftops of the few burned-out structures that still stood, but Shy didn't see any people. Or any movement. Or any signs of electricity.
The place was a ghost town.
Still, his heart was racing. He thought he might never see land again. But here it was.
According to the staticky report they'd heard on Marcus's radio when they first left the island, the earthquakes that leveled the West Coast were more massive than any ever recorded. Entire cities had been wiped out. Hundreds of thousands had lost their lives. But worst of all, the earthquakes had caused the deadly Romero Disease to spread like wildfire, infecting nearly a quarter of the population in California and Washington and Oregon. In parts of Mexico.
Shy swallowed, his throat dry and scratchy, and fingered the diamond ring in his pocket, thinking about his mom and sis. His nephew, Miguel. Throughout the month he'd spent on the sailboat, Shy held out hope that his family might still be alive. But now, seeing a portion of the destruction firsthand, the idea of hope seemed stupid. Like living in a little-kid fantasy world.
He turned to Carmen, who was trembling and covering her mouth with her hand. "Hey," he said, touching her arm. "It's okay . . . we made it."
She nodded but didn't look at him.
He stared at the side of her face, recalling how fine she'd looked back when he met her on the cruise ship. The sun had just starting setting, like now, and his eyes cut right to her beautiful brown legs. The buttons on her white blouse straining to keep it from popping open. But what got him most of all was her face. It was way closer to perfect than some Photoshop shit you'd see in a magazine. He was so shook that first day, he could barely speak. The poor girl had to ask his roommate, Rodney, if he was a deaf-mute.
Now Carmen was weathered-looking and too thin.
Her entire body covered in a thick, salty film.
It was the same for all three of them, the result of spending thirty-six days at sea in a small sailboat--each day marked on the inside of the hull in black dye. They'd baked in the relentless summer sun, then rotated sleepless nights at the helm holding Shoeshine's compass so they wouldn't veer off course in the black of night. They'd survived on loaves of stale bread and the few fish they managed to catch. Shoeshine had allowed each of them only a few sips of water in the morning and a few more at night, and all Shy could think about now was bum-rushing somebody's front lawn and sucking down tap water straight from the hose.
He turned back to the beach. "Please tell me this shit's not a mirage."
"No mirage," Shoeshine answered.
"I keep rubbing my eyes," Marcus said. "Make sure my ass isn't dreaming."
Shy watched Marcus's long-lost smile come creeping back onto his face as he tried powering up his portable radio for the two thousandth time since it had stopped working.
Still nothing.
Not even static.
Back on the cruise ship, Marcus was a hip-hop dancer. Gave dance demonstrations twice a day and freestyled late night in the club. On the sailboat, though, Shy learned that Marcus ran deeper than the Compton cliche he played in front of rich passengers. He was halfway through an engineering degree at Cal State LA. Wrote video-game code in his free time. A few of the big tech firms were already dangling jobs for after he graduated.
But did those companies still exist?
Did Marcus's college?
"Breathe it into your lungs," Shoeshine told them. "You all just made it back from the dead." Laughing, he kissed his homemade compass and slipped it into the duffel bag by his feet.
A helicopter was visible in the distance, flying low over the beach. An emergency crew, Shy hoped, his heart suddenly pounding. Maybe they could just hand over the vaccine they'd carried off the island, and the letter, and that would be it.
He was so relieved as their sailboat approached the shoreline that a lump climbed into his throat. He'd imagined this moment for thirty-six straight days. He'd dreamed it every night. Now here they were.
But he was nervous, too. The entire stretch of beach was gutted. They had no idea who was dead or alive, or what they were walking into.
"Where you think we are, anyway?" Marcus asked.
Shy coughed into a closed fist. "Gotta be LA, right?"
"Venice Beach," Carmen said.
The three of them turned to her. First words she'd spoken in three days, even to Shy. She pointed at the shore, to the right of their boat. "See those graffiti walls?" She glanced at Shy. "That's where Brett asked me to marry him."
Shy cut his gaze away from Carmen's and focused on the untouched walls. The mere mention of Carmen's fiance brought reality crashing back down on his head. Throughout their time on the sailboat, Carmen had been his salvation. He'd battled hunger for her. Dehydration. The crazy-person thoughts that kept creeping into his brain: You should jump right now, culo. Feed your ass to the sharks and be done with it. Why couldn't you have just died on the ship like everyone else?
But no matter how far Shy slipped into schizo territory, Carmen was always there to reel him back in. And he'd done the same for her.
Now that they'd made it back to California, though, it was time to face facts.
Carmen was engaged.
Carmen would be searching for her man.
"It was Venice Beach," Shoeshine said, steering the sailboat toward a clearing between two flagless poles. He glanced at the distant helicopter. "We don't know what it is now."
Shy scanned the stretch of beach again. His old man had taken him to Venice a handful of times during their year together in LA. But he didn't recognize anything.
"Whatever it is," Marcus said, "I guarantee it's better than floating our asses around for a damn month."
"That's the truth," Shy added.
Shoeshine shrugged, his wild gray hair blowing nappy in the wind. His braided chin beard still perfectly intact. "Time will be the judge," he told them.
Excerpted from The Hunted by Matt de la Pe?a
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Newbery Medal-winning author Matt de la Peña’s The Hunted, the sequel to The Living, is a high-energy, action-packed survival story.
“De la Peña has created a rare thing: a plot-driven YA with characters worthy of a John Green novel.” —Entertainment Weekly on The Living, A-
For those left living, it’s kill or be killed. When Shy pulled himself from the wreckage of the Paradise Cruise luxury liner, he met Addie. Addie was rich and blond, and with no one else to trust, she told Shy a secret she never should have revealed.
It’s a secret that people would kill for—have killed for—and she has the piece that could turn everything on its ear. The problem? Shy has no idea where Addie is. Back home in California seems logical, but there are more ways to die back home than Shy could ever have guessed. And thanks to what Shy knows now, he’s a moving target.
Praise for The Hunted:
“Readers will be drawn to the raw and gritty setting, fast-moving plot, and diverse characters worth rooting for.“—School and Library Journal
"Between [the] fast-paced plot and meaningful, diverse character development, this is a great crossover for fans of both thrillers and more character-driven novels."-Booklist
Praise for The Living:
“De la Peña has created a rare thing: a plot-driven YA with characters worthy of a John Green novel.”-Entertainment Weekly, A-
“Action is first and foremost. . . . De la Peña can uncork delicate but vivid scenes.” —The New York Times
“[The Living] is special because of its extraordinary protagonist, Shy, who I haven’t been able to shake from my mind in the weeks since I read the book.”-John Green, author of The Fault in Our Stars
"There's no way to classify The Living. It's everything I love mixed into one fantastic, relentless, action-packed story. As always with Matt, the characters are the best part. So real. I loved this book."-James Dashner, #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Maze Runner series
[STAR] "An addictive page-turner and character-driven literary novel with broad appeal for fans of both."-Kirkus Reviews, Starred
[STAR] "An excellent, enthralling ride...a great read for those looking for adventure and survival stories."-VOYA, Starred
A Pura Belpré Author Honor Award Winner
An ALSC 2014 Notable Children's Book Pick