Please enable JavaScript
Fire Will Fall review by MArms | LitPick Book Reviews
Fire Will Fall review by MArms
Fire Will Fall
by Carol Plum-Ucci
Age Range - 12 and up
Genre - Fiction
Five Star Award

LitPick Review

Profile Picture
Age at time of review - 13
Reviewer's Location - Springtown, TX, United States
View MArms's profile

Scott, Cora, Rain, and Owen are typical teenagers, at least they were until two months ago when a terrorist group, called ShadowStrike, poisoned the water of their town. They now have a level four disease and are living in the kellerton mansion, trying to deal with their scary symptoms and haunting personal lives. They all hope for a cure, but even more they hope they can trust the people in care for their life. Tyler Ping and Shahzad Hamdani are internet spies, they've taken on the illegal job of tracking members of ShadowStrike online. Only problem is no one will listen to them when they find out that ShadowStrike might not be as far away as everyone seem to believes. And their coming back.

Opinion: 

Fire Will Fall by Carol Plum-Ucci was a great sequel to Streams of Babel. I had not read the first one before this, but I still understood. Each page was filled with thought-provoking words, weaved in with suspense. Each chapter was terrifyingly realistic, every page raised goosebumps on my arms. It was entertaining yet filled with horror. I would think I had everything figured out, and then Plum-Ucci would throw in a horrifying twist. There was action, mystery, and even romance. I was engrossed with the book the whole time I was reading it. I would extremely recommend this book to a mature reader. A lot of the language, and sexual content was mature. I didn't approve of it, even though it did make the situation more believable.

 

Rating:
5
Content Rating:

Content rating - mature content

Explain your content rating: 

Violence, sexual content, and mature language.
KEYWORDS

Read more reviews by this Litpick Book Reviewer: MArms
Recommend this book and review to your friends on Facebook


RECENT BOOK REVIEWS