Brief synopsis (no spoilers): In each generation, for thousands of years, twelve Players have been ready. But they never thought Endgame would happen. Until now.
Category: YA
Omaha, Nebraska. Sarah Alopay stands at her graduation ceremony—class valedictorian, star athlete, a full life on the horizon. But when a meteor strikes the school, she survives. Because she is the Cahokian Player. Endgame has begun.
Juliaca, Peru. At the same moment, thousands of miles away, another meteor strikes. But Jago Tlaloc is safe. He has a secret, and his secret makes him brave. Strong. Certain. He is the Olmec Player. He's ready. Ready for Endgame.
Across the globe, twelve meteors slam into Earth. Cities burn. But Sarah and Jago and the ten others Players know the truth. The meteors carry a message. The Players have been summoned to The Calling. And now they must fight one another in order to survive. All but one will fail. But that one will save the world. This is Endgame.
Why I chose this book: Caught my attention on display at a bookstore.
My personal opinion (the review): What really bothered me was that most of these kids were excited about the meteors crashing to earth and killings thousands of people. They relished in the deaths and how it was good for
them. At least in books like "The Hunger Games" series Katniss doesn't want to kill the other kids. And the same could be said for Tris in Divergent.
I really wanted to know what "Endgame" actually meant, aka what they would be asked to do. And it's a real contest that people can enter too. I wanted to see what that was all about, but ultimately I couldn't stomach the attitude and tone that the kids had.
Warnings:
Death: Major meteors crash into the earth killing thousands in a dozen spots on earth. Known impending death of players in the "endgame"
Death: Major meteors crash into the earth killing thousands in a dozen spots on earth. Known impending death of players in the "endgame"
Movie rating equivalent: PG-13, bordering on R from the part I read.
Protagonist description: I only read about 6 of the 12 characters first chapters.
Point of view of story: Third person, but each chapter was distinctly it's own person.
Book length: Didn't finish
Story flow: Didn't finish, but hard to get a solid hold on what was going on when there are so many different stories going on at the same time.
Grammar and spelling issues: None
Character connection (no spoilers): None
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