Future Shock, by Elizabeth Briggs, is a YA time travel thriller, in which five teens are sent to the future on what seems like a harmless mission that soon goes horribly wrong.
Elena Martinez, tough, tattooed, and in the gifted program at school, is about to age out of the foster care system. If she doesn't find a job before she turns 18, she'll be homeless, and her one most pronounced skill, perfect recall, isn't doing her much good. Then comes an unexpected offer, that will solve all her financial problems-- to be a test subject for the tech giant, Aether Corporation, for just one day. She and four other teenagers—Adam, Chris, Trent, and Zoe—will be sent through time to the future to bring back information about technology that hasn't been invented yet. All but Adam are foster kids, with no one make a fuss if they don't come back. The rules are simply--don't look up your future self, and be back at the portal point at the right time.
But there are many things the Aether folks haven't told them. Little things like other test subjects going insane. And things go wrong from the moment they arrive at Aether Co. in the future and find it abandoned. When the teens break the rules and look into their own future lives, it's clear that things are even more wrong than they were starting to suspect. Because when they get home, all of them but Adam will be murdered.
There isn't much the kids can control, but they struggle to work together to figure out what's going to happen to them, because they must, though suspicion and the dangers of the future make it hard to do so. Adam seems an obvious suspect, because he lives, but he and Elena are drawn to each other, and she can't help but believe that there's lots more going on than meets the eye. There is. And the clock is ticking...because if they don't go back to their own present, with or without the information they need to save their lives, they're stuck.
The mad science of the future, and the big question of whether past events can be changed, make this a very successful time travel story. The thriller mystery part was exciting reading, in a scrambling to put pieces together way. The romance was a tad on the cheesy side, and too quick to blossom from attraction to more, but that's what happens to fictional YA characters. The ensemble cast of diverse teens take a while to emerge as individuals as opposed to types, but by the end there's enough to each one's story to make them believable people to care about.
I enjoyed it, and have added book 2 to my tbr list!
Here's another review at Finding Wonderland
This was a right shocker; I was surprised by how much I liked it!
ReplyDeleteWow! This sounds like an amazing story. Thanks for telling me about it. I will be looking for this one.
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