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We all looked up (2015)

door Tommy Wallach

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
8392325,746 (3.39)3
Science Fiction. Young Adult Fiction. HTML:Four high school seniors put their hopes, hearts, and humanity on the line as an asteroid hurtles toward Earth in Tommy Wallach's New York Times bestselling "stunning debut" (Kirkus Reviews, starred review).
They always say that high school is the best time of your life.

Peter, the star basketball player at his school, is worried "they" might actually be right. Meanwhile Eliza can't wait to escape Seattleâ??and her reputationâ??and perfect-on-paper Anita wonders if admission to Princeton is worth the price of abandoning her real dreams. Andy, for his part, doesn't understand all the fuss about college and careerâ??the future can wait.

Or can it? Because it turns out the future is hurtling through space with the potential to wipe out life on Earth. As these four seniorsâ??along with the rest of the planetâ??wait to see what damage an asteroid will cause, they must abandon all thoughts of the future and decide how they're going to spend what remains
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1-5 van 23 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
We all Looked up: Review I really loved this book. It is basically what happens when you learn the world can come to an end in 12 weeks. I loved the intensity of this book and also how many different characters thoughts that we got. We had five main characters 2 boys and 2 girls and they are all so different but this experience allowed them to in  a sense become friends. I also liked how this book really examined what would happen to the outside world if this was really going on and it felt really real to and it was intense read. I think that the characters and the realtonships that they developed really stood out to me. It is different take on end of the the wold story. I loved it a lot. I really loved a strong ending and this was left so wide open that I really wanted to know how the book ended but i understand that could have come across as rather cliche. I still wanted to know if they lived or died but I overall really loved the book.
 
What did you think of the ending if you read it?
 
Here is my vide review of this novel and Simon verse the Homo Sapiens Agenda  ( )
  lmauro123 | Dec 28, 2023 |
We all Looked up: Review I really loved this book. It is basically what happens when you learn the world can come to an end in 12 weeks. I loved the intensity of this book and also how many different characters thoughts that we got. We had five main characters 2 boys and 2 girls and they are all so different but this experience allowed them to in  a sense become friends. I also liked how this book really examined what would happen to the outside world if this was really going on and it felt really real to and it was intense read. I think that the characters and the realtonships that they developed really stood out to me. It is different take on end of the the wold story. I loved it a lot. I really loved a strong ending and this was left so wide open that I really wanted to know how the book ended but i understand that could have come across as rather cliche. I still wanted to know if they lived or died but I overall really loved the book.
 
What did you think of the ending if you read it?
 
Here is my vide review of this novel and Simon verse the Homo Sapiens Agenda  ( )
  lmauro123 | Dec 28, 2023 |
Enjoyed this. Well written and told from the teenagers perspective about a meteor headed towards earth. ( )
  MammaP | Apr 6, 2023 |
They learn that an asteroid may or may not crash into Earth in 2 months. After that, their version of normal changes forever. There's the athlete who was contemplating what he really wanted out of life, and now wants to do things that weren't part of his plan. The straight-A student who dreams of being a singer, but is stifled by her parents giant expectations, who now decides to live her own dream in the remaining days. The girl with the reputation, who wants her photography to mean something to the world. And the slacker with no backbone, who is just now finding where he belongs. All 4 of these people and their friends (and the whole world) are struggling with lives that may be cut short....

My Thoughts:
We All Looked Up is a book I've been wanting to read because A. I love the cover, and B. I've heard good things about it. It was an interesting read and for the most part I enjoyed it... but it didn't GO anywhere for me. There was potential for this book to make me FEEL something, and that potential just wasn't reached. I liked the multiple POV's and I liked the characters, but when it was all said and done, this book fell a little flat for me. It's about a world dealing with an impending doom... and the unknown, but for most of the book it wasn't a desperate book. There wasn't a lot of violence or fear. Which is why towards the end when things took a turn in that direction, it didn't feel right. I've read a lot of apocalyptic books, and most of them had that common desperation and human nature at it's worst element... but this book didn't lead into that until really late on. It didn't feel honest with the rest of the book.

The biggest problems for me were the following things: First Up- The Science. I would think that with an asteroid 2 months away, they would be able to track it's trajectory better then 2/3 chance of hitting Earth. I would think they would know. They would also know where on the planet it would hit and start to have SOME sort of contingency plan. In this book, the president is like "maybe you'll die, goodbye". Other stuff- I hated that Eliza's dad was a major factor in her life in the beginning of the book, and then he just fell away without her even seeming to care. I hated that the other parents in the book were completely non-existent. Peter's parents were the only ones that were even present and they were such a non-factor they may as well have been wallpaper. I can't imagine wanting to spend my final moments on Earth away from my parents/family. Everyone is not like that, but I'd be willing to bet most high school kids are. I would have liked to see some people like that. I hated that the build up to the last days were SO blah. I thought the countdown to the end would be INTENSE... and it should have been. It wasn't. I hated that the couplings and uncouplings were so predictable. I hated that things that were important to the 4 teens (photography, singing, love, friendship) didn't hold through until the end in the least. I hated that they wanted to spend their last day at some giant festival. It's not like the asteroid was projected to hit Seattle... so it would be a WHILE before they died. They would probably starve to death before anything else. Panic would set in... you think being at a festival with thousands of people is going to be fun in any way when panic sets in??

What I did like about the book: SO much more than I'm making it out to be. I did actually did like this book up until it's halfway mark. I liked Eliza and how she just owned her sexuality. I loved Andy. Actually Andy is probably the only character I really did love the whole way through. I loved that he didn't know what friendship was until it dropped into his lap. I loved his positive attitude. He wasn't perfect, but in a way he felt innocent even when doing bad things. I never thought about putting this book down through all the things I wasn't wild about. I still wanted to know what would happen and I still cared about these characters.

I guess for the most part my disappointments lie in the way things turned out to be exactly as they seem. The good people are the good people... the bad are bad. There aren't shades of grey or people that you like and relate to, but happen to be flawed human beings. For a debut, I feel there's something there for this author to go on... but for a book about life and death, it didn't go deep enough.

The Ending: I don't know what to think about the ending. I'm not going to give it away, but I definitely didn't love it. I kind of knew it was coming, but I guess I was hoping I would be wrong.

OVERALL: An okay story about 4 teens at the end of the world. It had moments that I liked, but for the most part I felt like it didn't live up to it's potential. I ended up feeling conflicted about whether I would recommend this or not. I say read, but with low expectations.

My Blog:


( )
  Michelle_PPDB | Mar 18, 2023 |
This book started out intriguingly enough -- with the typical angst and triumphs in a high school day -- only to have it put into screaming perspective with the announcement that an asteroid (Ardor) is on a collision course with earth -- 66 and 2/3rds percent chance of impact -- in 6 weeks. The book is set in Seattle and the students we are introduced to and meant to champion include basketball star Peter & his misguided sister Misery aka Samantha, their unbelievably one-dimensional parents, Stacy, Peter's princess-y girlfriend -- who isn't "deep" enough to stay in the story, artsy and slutty-in-a-feminist-kind-of-way Eliza who eventually hooks up with Peter, Andy, perpetual slacker and pothead, Bobo his dealer friend and Misery's boyfriend, and Anita, former straight-A, straight-laced uber-controlled student who wants to sing and gets together with Andy. It's like an apocalyptic Breakfast Club. Initially, these young adults have some deep thoughts and responses to the impending doom, but then the inmates begin to run the asylum and it deteriorates into chases and riots and bad decision making and ultimately death for one, though he was well enough to walk on his own only a short time before his demise which isn't even from the asteroid or its aftermath. "The freak shall inherit the earth" p. 227) about sums it up. The turning point toward implausibility is when a handful of them get thrown into a detention center after being rounded up after a public demonstration that goes south. While the book does raise good questions about what one would do with a global death sentence, and what really comes down to the important things, it gets off track and mired in teen impulsivity. The adults in the novel are complete idiots, which is the point? And the ending leaves you hanging --- which may also be the point. Compared to Age of Miracles this falls short in the lasting impact category. ( )
  CarrieWuj | Oct 24, 2020 |
1-5 van 23 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
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Informatie afkomstig uit de Engelse Algemene Kennis. Bewerk om naar jouw taal over te brengen.
And the meteorite's just what causes the light
And the meteor's how it's perceived
And the meteoroid's a bone thrown from the void
That lies quiet in offering to thee

You came and lay a cold compress upon the mess I'm in
Threw the window wide and cried, Amen! Amen! Amen!

-Joanna Newsom, "Emily"
And the meteorite's just what causes the light
And the meteor's how it's perceived
And the meteoroid's a bone thrown from the void
That lies quiet in offering to thee.

You came and lay a cold compress upon the mess I'm in
Threw the window wide and cried, Amen! Amen! Amen!
--Joanna Newsom, "Emily"
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To my mom,
for a lifetime of encouragement,
counsel, and inspiration
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"It's not the end of the world," Stacy said.
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Science Fiction. Young Adult Fiction. HTML:Four high school seniors put their hopes, hearts, and humanity on the line as an asteroid hurtles toward Earth in Tommy Wallach's New York Times bestselling "stunning debut" (Kirkus Reviews, starred review).
They always say that high school is the best time of your life.

Peter, the star basketball player at his school, is worried "they" might actually be right. Meanwhile Eliza can't wait to escape Seattleâ??and her reputationâ??and perfect-on-paper Anita wonders if admission to Princeton is worth the price of abandoning her real dreams. Andy, for his part, doesn't understand all the fuss about college and careerâ??the future can wait.

Or can it? Because it turns out the future is hurtling through space with the potential to wipe out life on Earth. As these four seniorsâ??along with the rest of the planetâ??wait to see what damage an asteroid will cause, they must abandon all thoughts of the future and decide how they're going to spend what remains

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