Mercy Mode

Author:   Em Garner
Publisher:   Carolrhoda Lab (R)
Volume:   2
ISBN:  

9781606843567


Pages:   341
Publication Date:   26 August 2014
Recommended Age:   From 12 to 13 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Mercy Mode


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Overview

Seventeen-year-old Velvet, her little sister, Opal their mom, who is recovering from the Contamination, and Velvet's sweet boyfriend, Dillon, are attempting to build a new life amid the rationing and regulations of the post-outbreak nation. But the outbreak isn't over: more people turning into ""Connies,"" more madness erupting, more killings occurring. And what they are being told is not the truth; the truth is far darker and more threatening. This gripping survival story is the second in the Contaminated series. Just right for fans of James Dashner, Carrie Ryan, and The Walking Dead.

Full Product Details

Author:   Em Garner
Publisher:   Carolrhoda Lab (R)
Imprint:   Carolrhoda Lab (R)
Volume:   2
Dimensions:   Width: 14.50cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 21.10cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9781606843567


ISBN 10:   1606843567
Pages:   341
Publication Date:   26 August 2014
Recommended Age:   From 12 to 13 years
Audience:   Young adult ,  Teenage / Young adult
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

This sequel to Contaminated (rev. 9/13) starts out slowly but hits its stride halfway through, when protagonist Velvet becomes a subject for medical testing. Seventeen-year-old Velvet lives with her boyfriend Dillon; her eleven-year-old sister Opal; an elderly neighbor; and her mother, a 'Connie, ' or one of the Contaminated--consumers of a diet drink contaminated by animal proteins that eat holes in the victims' brains, rendering them dangerously violent. Violet must fight viciously to get past the Connies every time she leaves the house to get supplies; but when the family is suddenly split up and she is taken by force to a sanitarium, she discovers that she is a very special case herself. Velvet's complexity and thoughtfulness make her an especially interesting dystopian heroine, and the intense and horrifying plot comes to an exciting conclusion that satisfies but provides some enticing threads to continue in the next installment. --VOYA --Journal ThinPro, the diet drink that unleashed the Contamination is history; its effects--victims descend, zombielike, into mindless violence--are anything but. To contain the still-spreading outbreak, areas hardest hit--Pennsylvania, much of the Northeast and Pacific coasts, and urban centers--are designated 'black zones, ' where healthy residents live under brutal, chaotic military quarantine and the Contaminated are rounded up and incarcerated--a one-way trip. Velvet and Dillon, who've married strictly to qualify her for benefits, struggle to maintain their fragile household: Opal, Velvet's sister; their mother, freed from her collar but ailing; and an elderly neighbor. While Dillon toils at his government-mandated job, Velvet prowls their abandoned subdivision seeking food and other necessities, sometimes making frightening discoveries. Hardship toughens her--but Dillon (and sometimes Velvet herself) worries there's a less benign explanation for her vastly increased strength, stamina and ruthless practicality. After all, Velvet herself once downed ThinPro. This violent world feels real because the violence has real-world consequences that force grim choices. Weighing the safety of loved ones against what's ethical and humane is agonizing, especially for Velvet. Tough and empathetic, hard yet vulnerable, she belongs in the front ranks of the dystopian sisterhood. Volume 2 of this smart series builds momentum and suspense, raises stakes and expands narrative scope--in short, plan on a marathon, up-all-night read. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal The Contamination hit as a result of a defective protein additive in a popular weight-loss water. By the time Velvet's mother became one of the 'Connies, ' the government had learned to treat the sickness with an electro-shock collar connected directly to the brain. Connies then became docile enough to be returned to their families. In a moment of desperation as her mother's collar went into 'Mercy Mode, ' an extreme electrical shock capable of killing the wearer, Velvet managed to remove it. Rather than the immediate death the government claimed would occur if the contraption was removed, her mother's condition miraculously improved. For several months, Velvet has been caring for her family in their old house well outside of town with her mother, little sister, a neighbor, and Dillion, her love interest in Contaminated (Egmont USA, 2013), whom she recently married to get better rations and medical supplies. While it has been difficult, they have been able to get by, but the fear caused by the recent outbreak may soon make it impossible. Garner continues her unique take on the very popular zombie story, focusing less on the horror of being attacked by mindless hordes of the undead and more on the homesteading tale of a small group just trying to survive. While the ending takes an unexpected and not necessarily beneficial turn into more common sci-fi territory, this book is a strong follow-up, keeps the pace active, and sets up a new direction for the series. --School Library Journal --Journal


The Contamination hit as a result of a defective protein additive in a popular weight-loss water. By the time Velvet's mother became one of the 'Connies, ' the government had learned to treat the sickness with an electro-shock collar connected directly to the brain. Connies then became docile enough to be returned to their families. In a moment of desperation as her mother's collar went into 'Mercy Mode, ' an extreme electrical shock capable of killing the wearer, Velvet managed to remove it. Rather than the immediate death the government claimed would occur if the contraption was removed, her mother's condition miraculously improved. For several months, Velvet has been caring for her family in their old house well outside of town with her mother, little sister, a neighbor, and Dillion, her love interest in Contaminated (Egmont USA, 2013), whom she recently married to get better rations and medical supplies. While it has been difficult, they have been able to get by, but the fear caused by the recent outbreak may soon make it impossible. Garner continues her unique take on the very popular zombie story, focusing less on the horror of being attacked by mindless hordes of the undead and more on the homesteading tale of a small group just trying to survive. While the ending takes an unexpected and not necessarily beneficial turn into more common sci-fi territory, this book is a strong follow-up, keeps the pace active, and sets up a new direction for the series. --School Library Journal --Journal ThinPro, the diet drink that unleashed the Contamination is history; its effects--victims descend, zombielike, into mindless violence--are anything but. To contain the still-spreading outbreak, areas hardest hit--Pennsylvania, much of the Northeast and Pacific coasts, and urban centers--are designated 'black zones, ' where healthy residents live under brutal, chaotic military quarantine and the Contaminated are rounded up and incarcerated--a one-way trip. Velvet and Dillon, who've married strictly to qualify her for benefits, struggle to maintain their fragile household: Opal, Velvet's sister; their mother, freed from her collar but ailing; and an elderly neighbor. While Dillon toils at his government-mandated job, Velvet prowls their abandoned subdivision seeking food and other necessities, sometimes making frightening discoveries. Hardship toughens her--but Dillon (and sometimes Velvet herself) worries there's a less benign explanation for her vastly increased strength, stamina and ruthless practicality. After all, Velvet herself once downed ThinPro. This violent world feels real because the violence has real-world consequences that force grim choices. Weighing the safety of loved ones against what's ethical and humane is agonizing, especially for Velvet. Tough and empathetic, hard yet vulnerable, she belongs in the front ranks of the dystopian sisterhood. Volume 2 of this smart series builds momentum and suspense, raises stakes and expands narrative scope--in short, plan on a marathon, up-all-night read. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal This sequel to Contaminated (rev. 9/13) starts out slowly but hits its stride halfway through, when protagonist Velvet becomes a subject for medical testing. Seventeen-year-old Velvet lives with her boyfriend Dillon; her eleven-year-old sister Opal; an elderly neighbor; and her mother, a 'Connie, ' or one of the Contaminated--consumers of a diet drink contaminated by animal proteins that eat holes in the victims' brains, rendering them dangerously violent. Violet must fight viciously to get past the Connies every time she leaves the house to get supplies; but when the family is suddenly split up and she is taken by force to a sanitarium, she discovers that she is a very special case herself. Velvet's complexity and thoughtfulness make her an especially interesting dystopian heroine, and the intense and horrifying plot comes to an exciting conclusion that satisfies but provides some enticing threads to continue in the next installment. --VOYA --Journal


ThinPro, the diet drink that unleashed the Contamination is history; its effects--victims descend, zombielike, into mindless violence--are anything but. To contain the still-spreading outbreak, areas hardest hit--Pennsylvania, much of the Northeast and Pacific coasts, and urban centers--are designated 'black zones, ' where healthy residents live under brutal, chaotic military quarantine and the Contaminated are rounded up and incarcerated--a one-way trip. Velvet and Dillon, who've married strictly to qualify her for benefits, struggle to maintain their fragile household: Opal, Velvet's sister; their mother, freed from her collar but ailing; and an elderly neighbor. While Dillon toils at his government-mandated job, Velvet prowls their abandoned subdivision seeking food and other necessities, sometimes making frightening discoveries. Hardship toughens her--but Dillon (and sometimes Velvet herself) worries there's a less benign explanation for her vastly increased strength, stamina and ruthless practicality. After all, Velvet herself once downed ThinPro. This violent world feels real because the violence has real-world consequences that force grim choices. Weighing the safety of loved ones against what's ethical and humane is agonizing, especially for Velvet. Tough and empathetic, hard yet vulnerable, she belongs in the front ranks of the dystopian sisterhood. Volume 2 of this smart series builds momentum and suspense, raises stakes and expands narrative scope--in short, plan on a marathon, up-all-night read. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal The Contamination hit as a result of a defective protein additive in a popular weight-loss water. By the time Velvet's mother became one of the 'Connies, ' the government had learned to treat the sickness with an electro-shock collar connected directly to the brain. Connies then became docile enough to be returned to their families. In a moment of desperation as her mother's collar went into 'Mercy Mode, ' an extreme electrical shock capable of killing the wearer, Velvet managed to remove it. Rather than the immediate death the government claimed would occur if the contraption was removed, her mother's condition miraculously improved. For several months, Velvet has been caring for her family in their old house well outside of town with her mother, little sister, a neighbor, and Dillion, her love interest in Contaminated (Egmont USA, 2013), whom she recently married to get better rations and medical supplies. While it has been difficult, they have been able to get by, but the fear caused by the recent outbreak may soon make it impossible. Garner continues her unique take on the very popular zombie story, focusing less on the horror of being attacked by mindless hordes of the undead and more on the homesteading tale of a small group just trying to survive. While the ending takes an unexpected and not necessarily beneficial turn into more common sci-fi territory, this book is a strong follow-up, keeps the pace active, and sets up a new direction for the series. --School Library Journal --Journal This sequel to Contaminated (rev. 9/13) starts out slowly but hits its stride halfway through, when protagonist Velvet becomes a subject for medical testing. Seventeen-year-old Velvet lives with her boyfriend Dillon; her eleven-year-old sister Opal; an elderly neighbor; and her mother, a 'Connie, ' or one of the Contaminated--consumers of a diet drink contaminated by animal proteins that eat holes in the victims' brains, rendering them dangerously violent. Violet must fight viciously to get past the Connies every time she leaves the house to get supplies; but when the family is suddenly split up and she is taken by force to a sanitarium, she discovers that she is a very special case herself. Velvet's complexity and thoughtfulness make her an especially interesting dystopian heroine, and the intense and horrifying plot comes to an exciting conclusion that satisfies but provides some enticing threads to continue in the next installment. --VOYA --Journal


ThinPro, the diet drink that unleashed the Contamination is history; its effects--victims descend, zombielike, into mindless violence--are anything but. To contain the still-spreading outbreak, areas hardest hit--Pennsylvania, much of the Northeast and Pacific coasts, and urban centers--are designated 'black zones, ' where healthy residents live under brutal, chaotic military quarantine and the Contaminated are rounded up and incarcerated--a one-way trip. Velvet and Dillon, who've married strictly to qualify her for benefits, struggle to maintain their fragile household: Opal, Velvet's sister; their mother, freed from her collar but ailing; and an elderly neighbor. While Dillon toils at his government-mandated job, Velvet prowls their abandoned subdivision seeking food and other necessities, sometimes making frightening discoveries. Hardship toughens her--but Dillon (and sometimes Velvet herself) worries there's a less benign explanation for her vastly increased strength, stamina and ruthless practicality. After all, Velvet herself once downed ThinPro. This violent world feels real because the violence has real-world consequences that force grim choices. Weighing the safety of loved ones against what's ethical and humane is agonizing, especially for Velvet. Tough and empathetic, hard yet vulnerable, she belongs in the front ranks of the dystopian sisterhood. Volume 2 of this smart series builds momentum and suspense, raises stakes and expands narrative scope--in short, plan on a marathon, up-all-night read. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal This sequel to Contaminated (rev. 9/13) starts out slowly but hits its stride halfway through, when protagonist Velvet becomes a subject for medical testing. Seventeen-year-old Velvet lives with her boyfriend Dillon; her eleven-year-old sister Opal; an elderly neighbor; and her mother, a 'Connie, ' or one of the Contaminated--consumers of a diet drink contaminated by animal proteins that eat holes in the victims' brains, rendering them dangerously violent. Violet must fight viciously to get past the Connies every time she leaves the house to get supplies; but when the family is suddenly split up and she is taken by force to a sanitarium, she discovers that she is a very special case herself. Velvet's complexity and thoughtfulness make her an especially interesting dystopian heroine, and the intense and horrifying plot comes to an exciting conclusion that satisfies but provides some enticing threads to continue in the next installment. --VOYA --Journal The Contamination hit as a result of a defective protein additive in a popular weight-loss water. By the time Velvet's mother became one of the 'Connies, ' the government had learned to treat the sickness with an electro-shock collar connected directly to the brain. Connies then became docile enough to be returned to their families. In a moment of desperation as her mother's collar went into 'Mercy Mode, ' an extreme electrical shock capable of killing the wearer, Velvet managed to remove it. Rather than the immediate death the government claimed would occur if the contraption was removed, her mother's condition miraculously improved. For several months, Velvet has been caring for her family in their old house well outside of town with her mother, little sister, a neighbor, and Dillion, her love interest in Contaminated (Egmont USA, 2013), whom she recently married to get better rations and medical supplies. While it has been difficult, they have been able to get by, but the fear caused by the recent outbreak may soon make it impossible. Garner continues her unique take on the very popular zombie story, focusing less on the horror of being attacked by mindless hordes of the undead and more on the homesteading tale of a small group just trying to survive. While the ending takes an unexpected and not necessarily beneficial turn into more common sci-fi territory, this book is a strong follow-up, keeps the pace active, and sets up a new direction for the series. --School Library Journal --Journal


Author Information

Em Garner is the pseudonym for a ""NYT"" best-selling author of romances. The author of 50 books, she made her YA debut with this series. Em started writing as a child, originally about the scary things that hid under her bed. She never lost her taste for scary stories, or for fantasies with a dark twist. Em loves the beach, where she often writes, but is afraid of sharks. She lives in Pennsylvania, where this series is set. The author lives in Lebanon, PA.

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