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Fear grips the nation as a vicious drug cartel invades the nation's capital, threatens to unleash a deadly virus, and takes the reader and classmates hostage, in an interactive adventure. Original.

118 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published February 1, 1996

66 people want to read

About the author

Edward Packard

170 books126 followers
Edward Packard attended and graduated from both Princeton University and Columbia Law School. He was one of the first authors to explore the idea of gamebooks, in which the reader is inserted as the main character and makes choices about the direction the story will go at designated places in the text.

The first such book that Edward Packard wrote in the Choose Your Own Adventure series was titled "Sugarcane Island", but it was not actually published as the first entry in the Choose Your Own Adventure Series. In 1979, the first book to be released in the series was "The Cave of Time", a fantasy time-travel story that remained in print for many years. Eventually, one hundred eighty-four Choose Your Own Adventure books would be published before production on new entries to the series ceased in 1998. Edward Packard was the author of many of these books, though a substantial number of other authors were included as well.

In 2005, Choose Your Own Adventure books once again began to be published, but none of Edward Packard's titles have yet been included among the newly-released books.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Josiah.
3,488 reviews158 followers
July 25, 2024
What happens when you and your class from school are invited for a tour of Washington, D.C. that happens to coincide with a heated moment in international politics? Your class is on a bus destined for the White House when news breaks: access has been temporarily suspended due to threats from the Alarin cartel, a global juggernaut in the weapons and drug trade. Your bus is diverted away from the White House, but safe passage is interrupted when gunmen in military fatigues storm the bus and order the driver to head for the Biological Research Institute. These Alarin cartel foot soldiers are threatening to release an extremely contagious virus known as EF1 unless dozens of their comrades are released from prison. The virus is contained within the Institute, and you and your friends are now locked inside its gates as hostages. When a glimmer of opportunity arises to quietly escape the bus on your own, should you take it, or stay with your classmates and hope for the best?

If you stay on the bus, you'll be singled out and brought into an office inside the Biological Research Institute where Marcos, the cartel leader, interrogates you. He wants you to deliver his demands to the United States president, but should you be upfront about your contempt for the cartel, or pretend you admire Marcos's spunk? The latter choice could land you in trouble, selected as guinea pig to be injected with the EF1 virus to confirm that Marcos and his men possess the genuine article. Quarantined in a cell under observation by the Alarin team, are you better off breaking the window and possibly spreading the virus, or biding your time? If you level with Marcos from the start, you're sent instead to communicate his demands to the president. You're now out of danger yourself, but are you willing to return to Marcos with the president's response? You could wind up on an airplane to South America with Marcos and his men as assurance they won't be shot down, but when you learn they managed to smuggle out a vial of the EF1 virus, will you pretend to join the cartel in hopes of stealing the vial and saving the world?

Making a run for the bushes when you're still on the bus opens up other story options. You could vault over the Biological Research Institute wall, but if you try it in broad daylight you may be shot by a guard or attacked by the cartel's ferocious dogs. Waiting until night seems reasonable, but even then you are captured. A bleeding gash on your ankle is given basic treatment, and the door to your cell left unlocked. If you go search for your classmates, you'll find yourself running from gunmen and seeking a dramatic path to escape before the cartel brings the hammer down. Will your daring gambit make you a hero? Alternatively you could be recaptured, and locked in a room where you meet Dr. Andrew Kostrikis of the Institute. The cartel doesn't know he's here, and you can help him steal the EF1 vial so the terrorists can't abscond with it. You might threaten the cartel men with breaking the vial yourself, but subtle games are going on behind the scenes. Play your cards right and you may receive the Medal of Honor for courage in the face of peril.

The action isn't as thrilling as it could be, but Hostage! offers decent narrative variety. It also reveals the extraordinary stakes in one ending where the EF1 virus leaks into the world; it's projected that within four months there will be upward of a billion deaths, and in five months nearly the entire human race will die. If you didn't comprehend the consequences of failure before that ending, you do now. The best parts of the book are the times you receive the Medal of Honor; these endings are actually somewhat emotional, so Hostage! feels like more than a slapdash action adventure you move on from with a shrug after reading. I rate it two and a half stars, and even if it doesn't live up to Edward Packard's classics, it's pretty good.
Profile Image for Chris Comden.
221 reviews28 followers
May 24, 2022
Hostage!by Edward Packard
Series: Yes Choose your Own Adventure #168
Format: Softcover
Stars: 3 /12
Recommend: Yes
Would Reread: Maybe



I give honest reviews and all my opinions are my own.

For more of my reviews go to Heavenly High Seas Books
https://heavenlyhighseasbooks.blogspo...
Profile Image for Sheila Read.
1,574 reviews40 followers
July 9, 2013
the adventures that I went through when I was bored I just read these books over and over again you would never get to the end of the story.
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