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MiNRS 2

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Dive right back into the action on Perses in this thrilling sequel to the gritty, space adventure, MiNRS, which School Library Journal called "a solid survival story."
They are coming to get you.
Hide.
Hide.

Hide.

The children of Perses have been receiving this message on repeat from Earth for weeks. Christopher, Elena, and the other survivors of the attack on their space colony know two things: Their victory over the Landers will be short-lived and a new wave of attacks is imminent.

New Landers arrive sooner than expected. Led by the ruthless Kirk Thatcher, and armed with a new lethal kind of digger, they vow to hunt down and destroy everyone.

The kids have nowhere to go but underground. Again. But resources and patience are running low, and the struggle to keep everyone safe is complicated by all the infighting.

As Christopher bears the burden of leadership, he also has to decide whom he can trust. There are no easy answers. And with deadly consequences on the line, there is no room for mistakes.
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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      The children of Perses deal with more troubles.In series opener MiNRS (2015), Christopher Nichols, Elena Rosales, and the other child survivors fought off the first wave of invading Landers, but the mining colony of Perses is still under threat. More Landers are coming, and the kids are receiving no help from Earth. When the Landers show up with the villainous Kirk Thatcher leading a fleet of lethal diggers, the kids have no choice but to go further underground and hide. But infighting among the kids, divided between children of miners and actual child miners, is just as threatening to their survival as the Landers are. Christopher's narration is stiff and cumbersome, detailing action scenes and verbal exchanges with little urgency or pizzazz. The characters are paper-thin, defined by single characteristics and simple motivations. The book's biggest sin is its jaw-dropping length, which drags out the cat-and-mouse game between the colonists and the Landers, removing urgency and wearing readers' patience thin in the process. Making things worse, the kids end up basically right back where they started with a signpost pointing at a third volume. The middle book in a trilogy needs to push the characters forward emotionally or evolve the narrative effectively, but this sequel does neither. An infuriatingly wasteful sequel. (Science fiction. 8-12) COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2017
      Christopher and his fellow juvenile survivors of an attack on their space-colony mining community (MiNRS) go on the offensive against a new "Lander" who wants to destroy what's left. Their mysterious contact from Earth hints at deeper conspiracies. Broadly drawn characters lack nuance, but well-defined conflicts among the survivors maximize narrative tension, and the near-continuous cinema-ready action sequences flow smoothly.

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2016
      The children of Perses deal with more troubles.In series opener MiNRS (2015), Christopher Nichols, Elena Rosales, and the other child survivors fought off the first wave of invading Landers, but the mining colony of Perses is still under threat. More Landers are coming, and the kids are receiving no help from Earth. When the Landers show up with the villainous Kirk Thatcher leading a fleet of lethal diggers, the kids have no choice but to go further underground and hide. But infighting among the kids, divided between children of miners and actual child miners, is just as threatening to their survival as the Landers are. Christophers narration is stiff and cumbersome, detailing action scenes and verbal exchanges with little urgency or pizzazz. The characters are paper-thin, defined by single characteristics and simple motivations. The books biggest sin is its jaw-dropping length, which drags out the cat-and-mouse game between the colonists and the Landers, removing urgency and wearing readers patience thin in the process. Making things worse, the kids end up basically right back where they started with a signpost pointing at a third volume. The middle book in a trilogy needs to push the characters forward emotionally or evolve the narrative effectively, but this sequel does neither. An infuriatingly wasteful sequel. (Science fiction. 8-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.5
  • Lexile® Measure:610
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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