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The Boy from Mars

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The year is 2086. The Mars Station, a cold and colorless interior city of ten thousand on the Red Planet is ruled by a ruthless Governor bent on creating a future dedicated solely to scientific advancement. The population includes several hundred children, all of whom have been genetically designed...except for one. Fifteen year old Thomas Knight was the last child born on Earth and sent to Mars as an infant to escape the floods that ravaged the planet. He leads a dull existence on the claustrophobic Station, and lives for the nights when he sneaks out of the segregated Boys' Quarters to break into the Artifacts Museum, where he can feed his obsession with all things Earth-related. Finding an old Webster's Dictionary, he collects mysterious words that form a portrait of the magical planet of his birth.

One night, Thomas encounters an older settler who informs him that he is the heart of a bold mission, conceived by the father he has never known...to save the planet he has never seen.

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    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2024
      An Earth-born Martian teen travels through space and time to save his home planet in DeLaurentis' debut YA novel. Fifteen-year-old Thomas Knight lives on the Mars Station, a strictly controlled interior city on the Red Planet in the late 21st century. He learns all he can about Earth, the "origin planet," which superfloods rendered uninhabitable a couple of decades earlier. His Earth obsession could lead to trouble--Martian inhabitants are confined to the Station, and attempts at escape are dealt with harshly. One day, Thomas meets a stranger who makes the startling claim that Thomas is not like his genetically engineered peers--he was the very last child born on Earth ("With a real mother and father? How could that possibly be?"). His birth father, whom he's never known, has worked with others to implement a plan for Thomas to salvage their devastated world. It entails time-traveling into both the past and the future, but Thomas doesn't exactly land where he was meant to. Arriving in 2023 Marin County, California, he meets a fellow teenager, Elly McAllister, who can tell him even more about the planet that has long enchanted him. DeLaurentis depicts a visually rich SF setting including the Station's interior of overlapping circles and the children's diet of geometric foodstuffs (like freeze-dried triangular tomatoes). The scenes set on Earth are equally engaging as Thomas spots so many peculiar things that Elly must explain to him, from a dartboard to a roller coaster. The relatively small cast shines, including Thomas, who easily adapts to changing circumstances; the ever-helpful and easygoing Elly; and Eno, Thomas' smaller "counterpart" (the boys room together on the Station), who's brilliant and loyal. Wherever he goes, the young hero faces obstacles, such as Mars' sub-zero temperatures, megalodons on Earth, and bullies that, sadly, exist on both worlds. While this book delivers a satisfying, well-rounded adventure, it's also the first installment in a proposed trilogy--Thomas' interplanetary, time-hopping journey is just starting. Vibrant backdrops and stellar characters animate a worthwhile SF romp.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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