When sixteen-year-old Cord MaCiy awakens from suspended animation, he’s surprised to find that he’s not in Antarctica. He was sentenced to transport to the prison there for anti-social behavior. Distaining the rule of the authoritarian corporate government, he preferred to wander free in the highlands of Scotland until he was captured by the Civil Defenders. As he rises from his coffin like container, he discovers he’s in a metal room with eleven other identical caskets. He learns where he is and why from a voice activated computer. “Antarctica is on Earth, the soft voice of GUIDE told him. “You are not on Earth.”
GUIDE, the computer, goes on to explain, that he is on a shuttle attached to a space freighter to be released when the ships reach the planet Klydor, to help establish a human colony there for the Colonization Section of Earth, or ColSec, as this part of Earth’s oppressive government is known. But there has been a malfunction. The shuttle is unable to disengage from the freighter.
GUIDE tells Cord it needs his decision. Should they continue into interstellar space until the ships run out of power and nutrients for their human occupants? Or should they return to Klydor, and attempt to land? Unfortunately, because the freighter was not designed to withstand the friction of a planetary atmosphere and had no landing gear, the linked crafts will most likely burn up in the atmosphere.
Hill’s adventure tale of the six teenage crash survivors is filled with action as the humans battle the dangers of an unknown world filled with giant sentient trees, giant omnivorous worms, and forest dwelling humanoids, and worst of all, one of their own who’s a psychopathic killer. The story is full of daring do and skirmishes, as the teens battle for survival on their new home world. It’s well-crafted young adult science fiction. The only odd thing about it to me is that the human characters and the author always refer to the resident forest dwelling humanoids as “aliens,” when in fact, the humans are the real aliens.