Fifteen-year-old Greta Kovachi travels with her brilliant father to a laboratory habitat in a submarine on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. Her father has created the first man-made black hole to... This description may be from another edition of this product.
"All of a sudden I became an experiment on the bottom of the ocean with a bunch of whacked-out scientists and three totally strange kids." Greta, the sixteen-year-old heroine of John Lunn's "The Aquanauts" finds herself in a Wizard-of-Oz moment when she accompanies her father on one of his field trips to a science laboratory at the bottom of the sea. Seeking to escape summer school and the boredom it offered, Greta also sees the week-long trip as an opportunity to get to know her father better. As an only child who lost her mother at an early age, Greta had established a comfort zone which included few friends and consistent non-conformity. She had no intention of changing that with this little escape but circumstances change everything. This adventure story includes a most interesting habitat but no scary sea monsters or terrors of the night. The fear comes from a time dimension shift that throws the inhabitants of the lab into a disorienting and bizarre experience that frequently forces them to puzzle out where and when they are in time. Once the main characters get past the "you-aren't-the-boss-of-me" tussle, they learn to work together and begin to plant the seeds that will carry their friendship far into the future. Targeted to an audience of middle to older teens, Lunn deftly mixes science and math with the challenges four young people face in quickly developing working relationships with each other. I found it interesting that the main character was a girl who didn't let the scientific theory and vocabulary distract her from her ability to just think things through. Her journey is one of self-discovery, as well, as she rises to the leadership opportunities that unfold. The author leaves the reader with some questions unanswered. Did the aging phenomenon affect Greta as it did the lab technicians and her father? Was the lab simply forgotten under the sea when the survivors reached the surface or did the adventures of Greta and her friends somehow change its future? With this tale, I like having open questions at the end. They give my imagination a launching pad for its own adventures. I recommend this book to readers of any age who enjoy adventure with a touch of science-speak, delivered by believable characters. Paula Buermele is a reviewer for Bookpleasures and author of the novel "The Dream Catcher Tour."
A top pick which can't be beat for swift action and originality
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
If you only pick up a few paperbacks each season for your collection, The Aquanauts is one you just have to have: it sounds like a classic underwater lab adventure but by book's end you're heavily involved in black holes, time travel, evil scientists, and a girl who faces losing her only parent. With a feisty teen as the protagonist, an undersea lab, four teens who are contrary at first but who must band together to survive, and many twists and surprises, The Aquanauts is a top pick which can't be beat for swift action and originality: if you purchase just one new sci-fi novel this year, make it The Aquanauts. It's that good.
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