| A Review of: Among the Brave by M. Wayne CunninghamBeat time,
Imagine a world with food so scarce the Population Police, led by
the despotic Aldous Krakenaur, are systematically scouring fake IDs
and annihilating all third-borns to limit families to two children.
That's the frightening world of Margaret Peterson Haddix's fifth
volume in her hugely successful Shadow Children series. Here
13-year-old Trey, a Latin and French spouting kid with
"cowardice" as his middle name conspires with Mark Garner,
the reckless, hell-raising brother of Trey's friend Luke (a hero
from an earlier volume), to solve a murder, rescue kidnap victims,
overturn Krakenaur and escape the clutches of the murderous population
enforcers.
To achieve their objectives Trey and Mark undertake a mission
impossible-to break into a mansion that has been turned into a
prison. As they do so, Mark is impaled on electrified razor wire
and carted off to a cage in the cellar, leaving a badly shaken Trey
to muster his courage and press on. Since the Population Police are
enlisting recruits in exchange for food, Trey bluffs his way into
signing up and gaining access to the cellar where Mark is imprisoned.
With the help of a couple of mysterious strangers and a couple of
lucky, credibility-testing breaks, he and Mark escape. Next they
find their friends who had been kidnapped earlier and manage to
free them as well despite a couple of hair-raising glitches that
could have just as easily ended with their re-capture. And even as
the third-borns ponder the dangers of their escape, they resolve
to re-enter the Population Police headquarters to commit acts of
sabotage on behalf of other third-borns still at large and those
yet to be born.
Among the Brave should prove to be as sure-fire a winner for reluctant
readers as the earlier award-winning volumes in the series. As usual
Haddix has taken pains to ensure the story is action packed and
free flowing, the characters memorable, and the prose clear, concise
and readable. Trey, who acknowledges at the end, "I'm braver
than I used to be, I've done things that I never could have dreamed
of before," is a very believable hero, who fought his fears
as he forced himself to stare down police officers, elude an unruly
mob, cozy up to a government official, and drive a truck without a
single driving lesson in his life. And even though Haddix has tied
up most of the threads in the book she has left enough of them
dangling for yet another yarn in the series.
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