The alarm clock goes off. You wake up and get ready for school, just like every other day. So what's the big deal? Well, what if one morning you suddenly discovered that you were one of the last surviving people on Earth? That's right, everyone else has disappeared. No idea how, no idea why, just...gone--vanished. This has come true for a small group of teenagers who have just awakened to their worst nightmare.
But it gets worse. Someone--or something--is hunting them down.
John Peel is the author of Doctor Who books and comic strips. Notably, he wrote the first original Doctor Who novel, Timewyrm: Genesys, to launch the Virgin New Adventures line. In the early 1990s he was commissioned by Target Books to write novelisations of several key Terry Nation Dalek stories of the 1960s after the rights were finally worked out. He later wrote several more original Daleks novels.
He has the distinction of being one of only three authors credited on a Target novelisation who had not either written a story for the TV series or been a part of the production team (the others were Nigel Robinson and Alison Bingeman).
Outside of Doctor Who, Peel has also written novels for the Star Trek franchise. Under the pseudonym "John Vincent", he wrote novelisations based upon episodes of the 1990s TV series James Bond Jr..
I read this book for the first time in the late 90s, as a young teen. Then I returned it to the library and forgot about it... mostly. Some part of it stayed with me though, bubbling to the surface from time to time as strange thoughts or fleeting impressions. Now, roughly twenty-three years later, I tracked it down thanks to the power of the Internet and read it again.
It wasn’t as good as I remembered, but it wasn’t terrible. The story meanders until about three-quarters of the way through when the action finally picks up. The characters are not particularly complex, nor is the writing, but the ending is what stuck in my mind all these years—and it just might stick in yours too.
This book took me by complete surprise. Wasn’t expecting it to be THAT good! Definitely one of the best stories I’ve read on people disappearing into thin air. Kept me on the edge of my bed all the time. And I love that it’s incredibly creepy. Also, I wouldn’t necessarily classify this as a kids book. Definitely YA horror for sure. But not for kids under 13. No way. Only complain I would have is the cover. Wish the book I have, which is the original fist edition, had a better one and more closely related to the actual story. Overall, love it! Love the big reveal at the end as well. Definitely did not see that coming. And I love that!
This book left me in suspense from cover to cover when I read it some 20 years ago. Yes i still remember the book and the emotions I felt reading it. I'd love to read it again with the other outer limits books. all i can say is you wont put the book down and the questions will haunt you for like 20 years until you can read the book again. experience
I started this book when I was 15 and never finished it. Now at 33 I finally found it again and decided I had to know how it ends. I think it's a good read for teenagers.
I got this book as a teenager and never read it back then and decided to read it at age 29... Probably should have read it as a teenager and maybe I would like it better. I understand now that I'm an adult, I am not this book's demographic, however I am still going to talk about it.
The characters are not likable to me, but the plot kept me engaged into wondering what was happening with these kids and where the world went and why were they the ones left. My rating is solely for the mystery plot, but that alone could not save this book for me.
You can tell this book was written by a man, if I did not know who wrote it I would guess a man every time. Because the way the male character is written and how he just doesn't like the girl at all at first but always comments on how she's attractive, but hates her clinginess. And the fact that the girl is written as being so insecure and purely clingy and like everything in her life can be saved by this dude, yeah no. Male fantasy for sure.
And the ending pissed me off so much. They had just met, they'd only known each other for a few days and they literally chose to stay together in their own made up world forever instead of going back to their families who they missed and loved, absolute crap. Teenagers really do make the worst decisions, but the author is not a teenager and could have made better ones.
I know I didn't need to go this hard, but it was my first book to read after taking a long hiatus from reading, and it just left me feeling very deflated.
Found: My brother gave it to me as a teenager
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.