I read the first book in this trilogy, Chasers, last year as it was part of the 50 Books You Can’t Put Down for the Get Reading 2010 campaign. In the first novel, 16yo Australian Jesse was on a leadership camp in New York being run by the United Nations when a catastrophic event occurred while he was riding the subway. Crawling out of the wreckage, he saw chaos everywhere and anyone it seemed who had survived had developed an insatiable thirst. Most were content to drink from puddles, fire hydrants, lakes, etc but there were some who hunted people down and drank from them. At the end of the book when he flees his safe spot to search for other survivors, he finds a video camera with recordings on it by a young girl who like him, seems unaffected.
The second book opens with Jesse’s continued search for Felicity, the girl on the video camera. He leaves a note for her in her apartment and goes looking for her in Central Park, where she mentions that she saw a bunch of humans that although appear infected, they are friendlier than others and could possibly be able to communicate. Jesse has seen the same people himself and he tries to find her there to no avail. He does however, encounter some suspicious looking ‘Army’ men who have found a way into the city for reasons unknown and appear to be systematically searching for something. After they almost kill him, Jesse tries following them for a while but eventually is discouraged of that and turns back. He then finds a student named Rachel who is bunkered down in the zoo, left caring for a handful of animals. She’s running out of food for them though and Jesse vows to leave and go and search out food so that she can continue caring for them. While he is undertaking this mission he encounters yet another survivor, a teenage boy named Caleb who is holed up in the bookstore he worked in before the event, claiming that it is more secure than most residences. He gives Jesse some information about the chasers and helps him take some things back to Rachel but he’s also got a bit of a sinister side and Jesse isn’t really sure whether or not he can trust him. When Jesse also finally finds Felicity, the four of them get together at the zoo and try and decide what they want to do.
Jesse is all for leaving, like the so-called Army characters he encountered told him to do. Leave, move north towards Canada where it’s colder, where the disease/infection/whatever it is doesn’t seem to have the prevalence. Caleb swears he’s spotted a group of some 40 odd survivors that don’t seem infected hiding out somewhere and that they should go and join them, or at least talk to them. Rachel is skeptical and also adamant that she cannot leave her zoo animals. They are her responsibility now and she has to stay and ensure that she can look after them as best she can. Felicity opts to stay with Rachel so when Caleb takes off one night, Jesse goes after him, splitting the group up.
It seemed that after spending the first book alone, survivors came crawling out of the woodwork everywhere in this novel – that’s not unlikely on it’s own. After all if Jesse survived and is uninfected than it’s logical that there are other people in the same situation, holed up like he was, trying to survive on what they could find from nearby and avoid the chasers. It just seems so easy that he keeps stumbling upon these people, especially Felicity, whom he leaves a note for telling her to meet him in a certain location. He doesn’t make it to the location on time for several days but keeps going, only to find her the first time he manages to get there at the time he suggested, which is also the first time she went there! It’s all sorts of coincidences, all the time.
I found it interesting that we learned a bit more about the chasers in this novel but I did also feel that it wasn’t enough. It’s been over two weeks since the incident occurred while Jesse was on the subway, probably closer to three weeks by the time this novel draws to a close and we’re still not really much the wiser about what has happened, other than a vague sort of biochemical type of incident. There are more questions than answers and give that there is only one book to go (and these books aren’t really that big) it seems like a lot to tie up in a final installment. It also seems like everyone is awesomely resourceful – rigging up generators and taking the time to hook up X-boxes to plasma TV’s and play a few games of this and that. I’m beginning to think that if ever I’m stranded in some sort of apocalyptic event, my chances of survival are pretty much zero because I wouldn’t know a generator if I fell over one, much less how to use it to power my little awesome hidey-hole, completely equipped with all the mod-cons a person could want!
The third book, Quarantine is due out in Australia next month and I am still invested enough to want to see how it ends and find out if Jesse ever makes it back to Australia. How widespread is this event? Is it just the east coast of America? Or will we learn that it’s affected a much larger area? I said in my review of the first book that I think this would be the sort of book I’d recommend to adolescent teen boys and I still would – I think it’s a subject matter that would interest them and just ‘gory’ enough to keep them going. It’s not the sort of YA that crosses over easily into adult readership, but I don’t think it’s supposed to.