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288 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2012
"I just stared back at my wagon, and for some reason, the worst of it was that hatch left hanging wide open, the car filling up with sand. Like the wagon had rolled its last mile and the world was telling me that nothing lasts forever.
Nothing, Banyan. Least of all you."
This book was so different from anything I've read before and I really loved the environmental, cautionary, conspiracy feel of it all. Definitely picking up the next book in the series when it comes out.
Bayan is a seventeen year old teenager who survives and makes a living by building trees. He sculpts trees out of scrap metal, LEDs, and other metallic and electrical devices. Yet when one of the rich people in a small community commissions the teen to build a tree, Bayan isn't thrilled, but willing to do it to make a living. Or, what's left of a living in this world with vicious man eating locusts and without living, breathing trees.
Yet when the daughter of the man who Bayan is working for produces a photograph of his long lost dad, Bayan is determined not only to find his father who was presumed dead- but the scenery around him - trees.
With a nothing more than a hunk of bark, a tattoo, and a snobby kid to help guide him, Bayan sets out on a quest to find his father and the trees.
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I’ve read several futuristic books where the world’s turned to junk, yet none of them really kept me as interested in them as this book. The plot turns and twists kept me reading. However, some of them I found to be unreal and somewhat ‘fake’. Although they kept me reading and engaged in the book, a couple of them I found unreal and didn’t make sense, for example, turning people into trees. I didn’t really understand how people would make the trees stronger and immune to locusts- fusing animal and plant cells didn’t really fly with me. Normally I am really into science fiction, but for some reason this book didn't go over well for me.
The tone of the book wasn't something that really flew with me either, although it's just my personally preference. I feel that the author didn't really give the reader a way to relate to Bayan, and there was no character development throughout the book, something that also irritated me. At the end of the book, he was the exact same guy he was at the beginning.
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I would recommend this book to anyone who is interested in Science Fiction.