Showing posts with label the city of ember. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the city of ember. Show all posts

Thursday, November 30, 2017

The City of Ember


This book is about underground,  land where people were brought because there was a disease that occur on the land and there were some of the people and children, so that some of the people at least could live. The place was built and they had all a kind of food there. But everything had an ending. The people keep reproducing babies and there were many people as possible .

The builders were the one who built the city and made for them a mayor, they had some hard laws for the government and it worked for them. Schools. Students had to graduate within 12 years and after that get a job that they did not have to chose for them selves, the mayor did choose for them. The students had big hopes  it some could loose and some could find their dreams.

The city of ember was saved by tw9 classmates. They saved the people of ember getting out of there and they were out of everything. They found the direction that the builders made and the city would be out of everything in 200 hundred years.


Book Review by Mulki A.

Friday, January 10, 2014

The City of Ember

The City of Ember, written by Jeanne DuPrau, is a modern dystopian with simple writing involved. The Ideal part about this book is that it takes over the end of the world and feels more helpless than ever for the city falling apart. The best theme to fit this story is to me in quotes “making a lie for more than one can make danger of millions of innocent lives” –Ben Mowitz.

This book is of course a dystopian fiction. Not only does it make a good atmosphere but makes a big problem to strive towards instead of just fixing the whole Dystopia. This takes place in the end of the world with only one city being left in the darkness of the world. The story is told in a third person omniscient and sort of limits it to two characters in the story and are mainly the protagonists. These two characters are Lina MayFleet and Doon Harrow, and they switch off around the story and take in their thoughts and feelings in the process. The city of ember is the setting and shows the main problem to the characters (almost all of them). The city of ember is flickering from the lights that are produced on lamps and light bulbs, and soon it gets blackouts. These blackouts occur more and more as the story goes on. Soon these two characters get suspicious of this activity and find out that they are both looking at the same thing. They go out and try to solve their many questions. Like, why are there so many blackouts? What’s out in the darkness? Will we soon lose supplies to the city? Is there and Exit? May I also note that there other problem is that there soon running out of supplies for them to live a healthy and needed lifestyle and soon things are getting scarcer for the city, and that’s where the climax kicks in. I couldn’t find as much powerful or inspiring quotes to go to this story so sorry.


To me this book earns a title of a good book, but it doesn’t be too powerful in its wording. More or less it takes up not that much time to read and sort of doesn’t feel like a good story at the end and may I note it was a sequel to begin where they left off. But in my opinion it didn’t feel so fulfilling to read it and felt more like it was meant for an 11 year old more than a Teen. Taking up a lot of my time to this book was fun but to me I still feel like I should have picked something better, also to note that I’ve read the hunger games before this. To me this is better for young readers because a reader of my age can easily suspect something to happen over the description it gives you instead of it saying it’s that item or that thing. Even though this sort of aspect made it show that the society that they lived in thought this particular item was strange. To me I suggest giving it to a kid with a good mental thought of reading to get into this. I feel like it’s more of a beginners Dystopia more than an intriguing Dystopia.


Book Review by Ben M.