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As soon as Paige Miller wakes with a pulsing headache and parched mouth, she knows something's wrong. Turns out she's been in a coma for six days, and in that time, humankind was wiped out by a virus, her family included. With feral animals roaming the streets, the outside of her Ohio hometown isn't much better, but at least she has her neighbor's dog, Emmaline, to keep her company. Eventually, Paige comes across other survivors, Trey and Tanq, and they follow a lead to Sandusky for answers. The truth, however, about why they survived, where the virus came from, and what the future holds may not be something they're ready for. Carson has created a terrifying postapocalyptic world marred by the scent of rotting flesh and a threatening new entity. The pacing is strong until the teens arrive in Sandusky, where racism is dealt with clumsily, and there's a lot of explanatory exposition all at once. As we deal with our own pandemic, more stories such as this are sure to have readers thinking about their own purposes, impacts, and legacies.
Horn Book (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)Ohio high school senior Paige wakes up from what she thought was just a bout of flu to discover that the sickness she has lived through seems to have killed off everyone else. While a series of explosions tears through her neighborhood, she scavenges supplies, grabs her neighbor's dog, and flees. She eventually meets survivors Trey and Tanq, and they team up to protect themselves from the nonhuman creatures that are turning up among the wreckage. The three make their way from Columbus to Sandusky, where transmissions from a pirate radio station offer hope. The broadcasters explain that the sickness is a bioweapon used by invading aliens, and they all decide to fight back. Carson (Walk on Earth a Stranger, rev. 9/15, and sequels) delivers a solid end-of-the-world thriller full of vivid imagery and strong emotions. Paige and Trey, both talented athletes, mourn the loss of their families and the futures they had planned, while each taking their own day-to-day approach to the extreme situation. Small details -- Paige's basic needs include tampons as well as food and water; the group drives a 1987 El Camino -- and a clear sense of place bring the story to life. Identity issues are naturally incorporated into the narrative, showing that race and sexuality (Trey, who's Black, faces microaggressions; asexual Tanq worries she'll be expected to help re-populate the world) still matter even as humanity is struggling to survive. Sarah Rettger
Kirkus ReviewsHigh school senior and WNBA hopeful Paige wakes up from a coma to find herself the only living person in her Columbus, Ohio, neighborhood.What happens next is not for the faint of heart: Dead, decomposing bodies-beginning with Paige's own family-litter the pages of this smart, suspenseful thriller. All Paige knows is that she went to bed with the flu one night and woke up six days later, severely dehydrated, to a changed world. She learns from a prerecorded radio broadcast that the flu that hit Columbus harder than usual became a national emergency, but as she works to regain her strength and gather supplies, she remembers the coronavirus pandemic of her childhood and realizes how improbable it is that people in multiple cities naturally caught the flu and died so quickly. She's cautiously thrilled to find two other living teens: former high school football star Trey, a would-be pre-med student, and Tanq, an asexual teen girl who is an artist. Together they set out toward Lake Erie hoping to reach fellow survivors Manny and Wyatt-whose live radio broadcasts promise answers-before their unknown enemy finds them. Paige's tenacity is appealing, and her relatable first-person narration shines when observing tiny details of her surroundings and matter-of-factly processing topics like privilege, menstruation, and reproductive rights. Trey is Black, and Manny is Puerto Rican; all other major characters are White.Suspenseful and totally un-put-down-able-with a clear opening for a sequel. (Science fiction. 13-18)
School Library Journal (Wed Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2021)Gr 8 Up-An apocalyptic first contact novel in the vein of The 5th Wave and The Walking Dead . Paige Miller goes to bed with flulike symptoms and wakes up six days later, the only one in her house still alive. One moment Paige's highest priorities are basketball and state titles, the next they're finding anyone still alive and getting some answers. Paige collects an eclectic and diverse group of survivors as she dodges drones and tries to figure out what happened. The flu that destroyed Earth was a biological weapon, and the enemy is alien. Carson has crafted an apocalypse so real it could happen tomorrow; references to COVID-19 and politics ground the story in a contemporary atmosphere without strictly dating the novel. With high stakes and a fast-paced survival plot line, sharp prose carries the novel when the characters feel distant and the revelations come too fast. The author attempts, with varying success, to work in issues of race and class. Paige is white, and the side characters include Black, Latinx, and asexual identities on the page. VERDICT Vivid and well-crafted, this pandemic-adjacent survival story may hit a little close too home this year. Carson's relentlessly action-packed dystopian is a secondary purchase. Emmy Neal, Lake Forest Lib., IL
ALA Booklist (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Horn Book (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal (Wed Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2021)
“Any Sign of Life is a heartbreaking story filled with courage, friendship, and personality. Paige Miller is the perfect team-up buddy in an apocalypse. I was with her when she lost everything, and stood right next to her when she took it all back.”—Wesley Chu, #1 New York Times–bestselling author of the War Arts Saga
“A timely update to classic postapocalyptic YA.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“A smart, suspenseful thriller. Totally un-put-down-able.”—Kirkus Reviews
When a teenage girl thinks she may be the only person left alive in her town—maybe in the whole world—she must rely on hope, trust, and her own resilience. A harrowing and pulse-pounding survival story from New York Times–bestselling author Rae Carson. Any Sign of Life is a must-have for readers of Rick Yancey’s The 5th Wave and Neal Shusterman and Jarrod Shusterman’s Dry.
Paige Miller is determined to take her basketball team to the state championship, maybe even beyond. But as March Madness heats up, Paige falls deathly ill. Days later, she wakes up attached to an IV and learns that the whole world has perished. Everyone she loves, and all of her dreams for the future—they’re gone.
But Paige is a warrior. She pushes through her fear and her grief and gets through each day scrounging for food, for shelter, for safety. As she struggles with her new reality, Paige learns that the apocalypse did not happen by accident. And that there are worse things than being alone.
New York Times–bestselling author Rae Carson tells a contemporary and all-too-realistic story about surviving against the odds in this near-future thriller. Any Sign of Life will electrify fans of Rory Power’s Wilder Girls and Emily St. John Mandel’s Station Eleven.