Neal Shusterman has just won over a new fan! I love this philosophical trilogy that is the most unique fantasy novel I have read. The setting is a place where children go after they die but for various reasons, don't reach "the light at the end of the tunnel". Instead they arrive in "Everlost" where they must determine their existance with weakening knowledge from their life before death and only faith of what their final destination might be - just as Wordsworth describes in his Ode from "Intimations of Immortality":
Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting:
The Soul that rises with us, our life's Star,
Hath had elsewhere its setting,
And cometh from afar:
Not in entire forgetfulness,
And not in utter nakedness,
But trailing clouds of glory do we come
From God, who is our home:
Instead of coming from "God", the "Afterlights" arrive in Everlost after a nine month "sleep". When they awake, if they don't keep moving, they will sink into the earth, and if they don't make a continual effort to remember their name, families, and origin, they will forget it. Their weaknesses and strengths come with them and will become weaker or stronger depending on their choices. The small and sometimes big choices the children make in a world without adults and a strong central leadership determine if they live an existence of good, evil, or mindless habit.
The trilogy follows various connected characters who are all strong leaders, but use their leadership skills and talents for various purposes. Each character demonstrates the importance of motive, pride, humility, love, justification, and ambition in determining who we become.
Some great quotes about:
Ruts and Routine:
Book 1 p 135 “There are mysteries in Everlost. Some of them are wonderful, and others are scary. They should all be explored, though – perhaps that’s why we’re here; to experience the good and the bad that Everlost has to offer. I really don’t know why we didn’t get where we were going, but I do know this much; being trapped doing the same thing over and over again for all time is no way to spend eternity – and anyone who tells you so is wrong.”
The Power of Belief:
book 3 p 261 "The power of belief is a very real thing in Everlost. The way one looks, physical strength, is all determined by what an Afterlight believes – and no one can truly control what they believe. We can lie to ourselves, saying we believe one thing and sometimes we convince others it’s true, with the hope that by convincing others, we can convince ourselves. Wars are often waged not because of what we believe, but because of the things we want others to believe."
Temptation
Book 3 p 299 "Temptation. It was a tricky thing to grapple with, for it was hard to sort out one’s own personal motives."
Love
Book 3 p325 "Love, Allie concluded, wasn’t blind, it simply saw alternate dimensions."
P 483 “I’ve loved you for a very long time in spite of all the bad stuff that’ happened between us . . . I’ll tell you why, then. Because you let me see who you could be. Not who you were, not who you became, but who you might become. Which means the Mary I love, in a way, hasn’t even been born yet. But she could be now.”
Justification
Book 3 P 340 "How easy is murder when one calls it by a different name? How much easier is it for the conscience to condone “reaping” than “killing” – and when one knows that death isn’t the end, does it stop the killing hand for fear of retribution, or does it simply make it easier to kill, because, if life continues, how can murder be murder at all?
“Kill them all, for the Lord knoweth them that are His.” That was the creed of the medieval crusaders, cutting down everyone in their path, the good and the bad, content in the knowledge that God would sort them out in the hereafter. They believed themselves holy warriors, bringing glory and reward with every bloody slash of their swords."
Destiny
Book 3 P 431 “Destiny is the sum of the choices that God knows we’ll make.”
For once, Allie the Outcast doesn’t disagree, but she adds, “Not even Einstein can do that kind of math.”
Humility
book 3 P 491 "It was in her [Mary] heart to help and protect everyone who came to Everlost, but she couldn’t separate herself from her calling. Once it became all about her, it got sick and twisted until it destroyed her and almost destroyed the world.”
. . . Allie had always been an ambitious girl, but that awful experience [how helpless she felt inside the coyote] had taught her that there were more forces at work in a balanced world than her own willpower; there was nature, there was wisdom, there was knowledge and understanding. Without life’s humbling experiences, Allie could have been just like Mary Hightower."