Cover Image: Project F

Project F

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Member Reviews

Project F imagines a world that is coming back from near human extinction due to climate change. Civilization has been rearranged and reorganized and now must adhere to what some feel are strict rules. Fossil fuels have been banned for years, limiting travel.

When Keith stumbles across a mysterious project named Project F, he can't help but get involved. His curiosity leads him to discover that a group of scientists are trying to create a tool to make man fly again. Keith wants so badly to be a part of this, but is it the right thing to do?

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Project F is alright! My main issue with the book is that it is pretty thin on most elements. The characters' motivations aren't incredibly fleshed out and the overall plot isn't as compelling as the title and cover suggests. What I did like was the books messaging about the environment and the brevity of the read. I'll be picking this up for my classroom and will recommend it to the students that I have that enjoy City of Ember.

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"Project F” is a middle grade novel written by Jeanne DuPrau. I loved reading her “City of Ember” series years ago, so I was very excited to see that she has a new book releasing.

I am honored to have received an eARC from Net Galley and Random House Children’s Books.

“Project F” will be released on October 10, 2023.

I really enjoyed this look into a possible future. Climate change is real. Our choices now have consequences for generations to come.

I recommend this book for middle grade readers.

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I tried. I really tried. I just couldn't connect with this book. I wanted to. I have been a fan of Jeanne DuPrau's City of Ember for a long time. It is one of the books that I recommend to my students. The writing in Project F seemed completely different from other texts by the author. I felt like facts were given instead of drawing me into the plot and world that was being created. This book was a miss for me.

Thanks to the author, publisher, and NetGalley for an arc in exchange for an honest review.

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I was expecting City of Ember level of book. This was not it. I felt like this book was okay, but not what I was expecting. There was not enough depth in the story for me.

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First sentence: All was going well in our country at the time this story begins, which is several hundred years in the future from the time you're reading it. There were no wars, few wildfires and floods, no famines.

Premise/plot: Looking for a children's book written with a hammer instead of a pen? Not literally, I suppose, since I imagine almost all writers type instead of write by hand. But this may be one of the most heavy-handed books I've read in my life--definitely the most obnoxiously didactic I've read in 2023. So what is the premise? DuPrau has created a perfectly perfect utopia set several hundred years after a terrible/horrible/disastrous fall. No fossil fuels are used at all. At all. And though the world's population is much smaller, civilization less advanced, and technology frozen at a socially-acceptable place, everything is just about perfect--in a self-righteous way. (The characters are so SMUG.)

Keith Arlo, our protagonist, hasn't been paying close enough attention to history lectures about the evilly-evil monsters of the past. So he's gullible and falls prey to adventure. It starts with a train ride. He is going to collect his newly-orphaned cousin, Lulu. But Malcolm, the passenger sitting close to him, is working on Project F. He tells just enough to make Keith super curious. When the two passenger's bags are mixed up--Keith takes Malcolm, Malcolm takes Keith, Keith's fate is nearly-sealed. He MUST return Malcolm's bag; he must explore all the secret documents and drawings; he must read the HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY, a book in his suitcase.

The fate of the world may just rest on Keith's young shoulders and because he's not great at researching the evil-monsters of the past at the library OR great at listening in history class, then utopia is threatened.

So what is Project F? Well, it's MODEL F. F for Freedom? F for Fossil Fuels? F for Fun? Model F stands in opposition to everything this new utopia stands for. And Keith is tempted to have fun and experience freedom. Will the world collapse a second time?

My thoughts: I suppose I blended some of my thoughts in the premise/plot summary. I couldn't help it. It's rare I'm so incredibly disappointed by a book. I would say that City of Ember is one of my all time favorite-favorite-favorite books to reread. I adore that book SO MUCH. It's like one of my go-to books that I love to recommend to anyone/everyone. It's just a fantastic adventure. This book is the complete opposite. The character development is horrible. Unless the goal was to create characters that are so incredibly self-righteous, smug, proud, condescending, that you can't help but to hate them. The story is weak/thin--in my opinion. The writing is horrible. All tell, no show. I think the biggest annoyance was that whole pages of this one are just excerpts from a book HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY. These excerpts are literally just over-the-top lectures. As if the main narrative thread wasn't didactic enough.

It is my opinion that even GOOD messages (or GREAT messages) can be incredibly annoying if used as a hammer. No opinion is made better by being used as a weapon, a hammer; you can't beat a belief into someone else's head. You can't. You just can't. But you can get it published apparently.

I don't love disliking a book. I don't. I was super excited to read her newest book. I had high hopes. I even moved it to the top of my list. I was eager to read this. I welcomed this. But I was disappointed.

I also thought some of this one was blasphemous. Yes, I know not every reader will come from a Christian background, a religious background with Christian roots, but this futuristic "update" of sorts to the doxology was horrendous.

Praise Earth from whom all blessings flow.
Praise sky above and sea below.
Praise creatures great and small between.
Praise darkness, light, and holy green.

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