Chasers
 James Phelan 
Genre: YA Post-Apocalyptic 
Publication date: October 30th 2012
by K-Teen                          
 
 
Four Teenagers.
One Destroyed City.
Thousands of
Infected Predators. 
Jesse  is on a UN Youth Ambassadors camp in New York when his subway carriage  is rocked by an explosion. Jesse and his three friends, Dave, Mini and  Anna, crawl out from the wreckage to discover a city in chaos.
Streets  are deserted. Buildings are in ruins. Worse, the only other survivors  seem to be infected with a virus that turns them into horrifying  predators… 
Outnumbered. No sign of life. Just them. And you… ALONE.
–A copy was provided by Kensington Teen for review–
 
                                           Wow I haven’t had an ending  catch me this off guard in a long time! Well played, Phelan! Well  played! Almost grabbed you a 4 stars, there!
Alas, the book isn’t  without its flaws. There could have been more action to stir things up,  more Chasers for sure, and a LOT more answers even for a first book in a  series–we basically learn nothing of what happened, why, or how far  this apocalypse spans. All we know, is that Jesse and his friends got  off the subway after an explosion and the whole city is in shambles. The  only “survivors” they meet are these infected humans who have a strange  unending thirst for anything drinkable, which includes blood. As a post  apocalyptic book I can say this is quite different. They’re far from  vampires, but also pretty far from being zombies, so what we get is the  always scary unknown. We don’t know what caused it or what they really  need, exactly, and if they can recover–though we do get intriguing  developments on their parts. I thought this was done well and I couldn’t  quench my thirst (ha!) for answers fast enough, leaving me to fly  through this book in no time. Thus it’s unfortunate that we don’t at  least get a hint of what caused this bizarre set of circumstances that  add up to what seems to be the apocalypse. At least it’s only book 1!
Since  we get no answers you’re probably wondering what the book shells out.  Well this book is more about surviving in the early days of a disaster  such as described than anything. We don’t get a lot of crazy thrills or  heart pounding sieges, we basically hole up in 30 Rock with our  characters. I didn’t mind this as much as other reviewers, it seems. It  kind of reminded me of This Is Not A Test by Courtney Summers, where the  book is very tame in action, but heavy with the fear of the unknown in  addition to having a strong psychological base. This one may not be as  psychologically messed up, but we do see glimpses of Jesse’s mental  instability pop up towards the end especially. As for the fear of the  unknown, I think not knowing if and when these strange beings will be  hanging out and about gives the book a lot of tension. I personally  enjoy these types of survival books more than those that are filled with  nothing more than cheap thrills. So yes, the book is slow paced as far  as “infected” action goes, but I can’t say I was bored for a minute  while reading it. The fascinating nature of the plot kept me captivated.  In the end, I’m thankful for the character driven plot that we got in  this first novel and I think it will add up to a much stronger sequel as  well, knowing what we know now. It makes for a very realistic  representation of someone’s psychological profile in such a terrifying  situation. 
I appreciated the NYC setting a lot too. It’s a  setting that’s familiar, maybe a little overused, but what better way to  show the monstrosity of an emptiness like Jesse is experiencing? When  you’re alone in New York City, you’re truly and undeniably alone. I  think the author may have gone a little overboard trying to bring this  setting to life, though. With mentions of every street corner, every  building, every sight, it becomes a little tiring unless you actually  live in the area and are able to follow these details. Otherwise it’s  simply blah blah that you come to ignore. It’s not like it makes a  difference if I know that our characters are on 7th street, or on 59th,  all I need to know is how far they have to run, eh?
I think this is  one instance that would work better if it was made into one large  stand-alone novel, instead of 3 short (230 pages) books. I guess one  argument for it being so short is that the slow pacing never has time to  bore, but it did leave time to ponder and get impatient for answers. I  will definitely be reading the sequels, I did really enjoy it despite it  not being perfect–this is the type of apocalypse that fascinates me  for real. You’re suddenly in a world that just went poof! With that  said, I’m thinking the series, when finished, will be better rated than  its individual installments. Either way, the ending of this one alone is  brilliant, thus worth the read! At least I think so!
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