Reviews
"Bick takes the best of post-apocalyptic, zombie fiction and adds...the exact thing that has been sorely lacking from those genres: girl power, and in a heaping dose." --starred, VOYA, "After an electromagnetic pulse destroys all electronic devices and billions of folks, the relative few remaining aren't liking their odds. Apart from starvation, natural disasters, and marauding gangs of desperate survivors, there is also the fact that almost all of the young people are now turning into flesh-eating zombies. Bummer. Alex, Tom, and Ellie are three who, at first, escaped all of the possible hazards. Soon, however, Ellie is kidnapped for her bait potentialsince children are rare, she's valuable enough to get her abductors admitted to a safe haven. Tom ends up gravely injured, and Alex herself seems to have a range of options that are all actually worse than her life before the pulse (in which she was dying of a brain tumor, just to give some perspective). Readers seeking levity or happy endings are duly warned that this is a grim world and all of the paths are realistically horrificthere really are no quick saves or easy options after the end of the world as the characters know it. While it might have been more comforting had some survivors been heroes, it is to Bick's credit that she sticks with her premise that epic, utter disaster would yield frightened, selfish, dangerous, and deranged individuals, and these are the folks with whom Alex, stubborn and brilliant and achingly relatable, must contend. The gorgeous (and disturbing cover) is sure to grab attention; an impeccable sci-fi/horror balance, quick pace, and risky storytelling all live up to the jacket's promise." The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, 5Q5P M J S A/YA "Bick takes the best of post-apocalyptic, zombie fiction and adds...the exact thing that has been sorely lacking from those genres: girl power, and in a heaping dose...her heroine faces situations that make the Hunger Games look like a tea party...Bick tugs at heartstrings while gearing up for the next dreadful thing waiting around the corner." starred, VOYA, "[A]n impeccable sci-fi/horror balance, quick pace, and risky storytelling all live up to the jacket's promise." --The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, "This book is the first in a new dystopian thriller trilogy. The story opens with Alex, a teenage survivalist backpacking to a remote area to scatter her parents' ashes and deal with her own impending death from a brain tumor. However, she becomes an unexpected survivor of an EMP, electromagnetic pulse, that destroys every electronic device and leaves billions of people dead. Forming a small family with a little girl whose grandfather was killed and a young solider named Tom, Alex faces a new and terrifying world. Oh, and did I mention the Zombies? Fans of Hunger Games, and Everlost will be looking for the next book. Ms. Bick has a winner with this series and your students, including reluctant readers, will love it. Highly Recommended." --starred review, Library Media Connection, "This is an affecting postapocalyptic tale that divides its time between survival story and horror, as when readers encounter the vividly described results of the EMPs and zombie attacks." --Booklist, "Seventeen-year-old Alex is alone on a Michigan mountainside when electromagnetic pulses (EMPs) released into the atmosphere above Earth shut down power and communications grids, trigger nuclear devices, and turn most adolescents into flesh-eating zombies. She eventually finds herself safe--or so she thinks--in Rule, where a council of church elders holds sway. But Rule is a town of factions and unease, and what Alex discovers about its undercurrents may kill her. This is an affecting postapocalyptic tale that divides its time between survival story and horror, as when readers encounter the vividly described results of the EMPs and zombie attacks. Bick understands the effects (and affect) she produces, though, and offsets such moments with ordinary things like falling in love, feeling safe, and even fishing. The consequence of the focus on action and incident is limited characterization, but an open ending reassures fans that there will be other opportunities to know Alex and to unravel the mystery of Rule." --Booklist, "When civilization ends and you're faced with an army of face-eating, nuclear-mutant zombies, having a brain tumor doesn't seem so bad. Alex, orphaned at 17 and dying, decides she's sick of pointless chemo. She bugs out of school for a backpacking trip in the wilderness, determined to make her own end. Just a few days into her trip something terrible happens: A horrible, screeching pain knocks her senseless, kills an elderly backpacker and sends scores of dead birds falling from the sky. Wild dogs in the area seem to have run mad, and did Alex actually see two teenagers eating an old women? Along with two fellow survivorsbratty middle schooler Ellie and Tom, a young soldier on leaveAlex seeks safety. Alex and Tom are both outdoorsy, but for every cache of weapons and MREs they find, another horrible event takes place. Their gun-toting survivalism only keeps them safe for so long in a post-apocalyptic America in which most of the other young people have been Changed to cannibals. The requisite creepy cultist village raises excellent questions of trust and society. Alex can't survive on her Glock alone, she needs supplies, knowledge, allies and affection. Splendidly paced apocalyptic zombie horror ends with a thrilling, terrifying cliffhanger and a number of unresolved mysteries." Kirkus Reviews, "Bick delivers an action-packed tale of an apocalypse unfolding, launching a trilogy with flair." --Publishers Weekly, "The novel is equal parts horrifying and riveting, and many teens will be compelled to devour it in one sitting." --School Library Journal, Gripped me from beginning to end - dark, creepy and suspenseful. James Dashner, New York Times Best-Selling author of The Maze Runner and The Scorch Trials A haunting and epic story of survival in a shattered world, ASHES is a must read . Michael Grant, New York Times Best-Selling author of Gone "...a harrowing apocalyptic survival tale that brims with true horror....Ashes inhabits the same dark country as The Stand (and is, in fact, delightfully King-esque at times) or Justin Cronin's recent viral apocalypse The Passage .... Bick's ability to convincingly render the mindset of people exposed to horrors and those still living with them makes not just Alex but all the characters around her feel real enough that we ache for them." Locus Magazine The gorgeous (and disturbing cover) is sure to grab attention; an impeccable sci-fi/horror balance, quick pace, and risky storytelling all live up to the jacket's promise. The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books An action-packed tale of an apocalypse unfolding, launching a trilogy with flair . Publishers Weekly Gritty, grim, grotesque, gruesome, gratifying and ultimately deeply satisfying, Ashes is this year's best ya dystopian novel . Pamela Thompson, El Paso Times Sunday Living Splendidly paced apocalyptic zombie horror ends with a thrilling, terrifying cliffhanger and a number of unresolved mysteries. Kirkus Reviews You won't want to put it down and, quite frankly, it blows the rest of those dismal-future books clean out of the water. Donna at Bites, www.bitemybooks.com Ashes is disaster done right, it has to be one of the best disaster books I have read in a long while... I cannot recommend this book enough . (Five Stars) www.readforyourfuture.org It's like the Walking Dead, but in a YA novel.... I can't wait for the sequel! Hallie Wilkins, age 16, Anderson's Bookshops Dystopia on steroids, exactly what it should be. Pamela, Hickelbees, San Jose, CA Front and center we have my current obsession, Ilsa Bick's Ashes, which is like Justin Cronin's The Passage for the YA set. Suzanna Hermans, co-owner of Oblong Books & Music in Rhinebeck, N.Y If Cormac McCarthy and Justin Cronin bore a lovechild (I read The Passage directly following ASHES), Ilsa J. Bick would be their bouncing baby girl. A. Ragheb, randomactsofreading.com "Great writing. Fantastic plot. Likeable characters. Mt. Everest-type cliffhanger. It all makes for a fabulous book -- for young adult readers and adults alike." - Examiner.com (Chicago) " Ashes is one that fans of Suzanne Collins's trilogy will surely devour. ...What will really grab readers is the wonderful narrative that carries Ashes through every shocking, unexpected plot twist. Bick clearly has a natural gift for storytelling, and here she has crafted a compelling story that will suck you in." --- Examiner.com (national) "An easy read with engaging characters and an intriguing plot. ...This novel is gripping and intense but very dark...it's not a book for the faint of heart or young and may leave readers checking for their flashlights and battery-operated radios -- just in case." -Deseret News, "Bick delivers an action-packed tale of an apocalypse unfolding, launching a trilogy with flair. While camping in a national park in Michigan, 17-year-old Alex, a girl coping with a brain tumor and the side effects of its treatment, survives a series of electromagnetic pulses that may have taken out the entire world. Miles from nowhere, she hikes with new companionsan obstinate eight-year-old orphan named Ellie and a young soldier named Tomas they try to make sense of things. Aside from wrecking their equipment, the pulse has killed most adults and morphed young people into psychotic flesh-eating monsters that are soon dubbed the Changed. Alex is different, too (her formerly dead sense of smell is now nearly supernaturally strong), and the companions worry about their own potential to 'Change' as they attempt to find other survivors. Bick (Draw the Dark) doesn't shy away from goreone woman's guts 'boiled out in a dusky, desiccated tangle, like limp spaghetti'but it doesn't derail the story's progress. If readers have any complaint, it will be with the ending, which only sets up the next book." Publishers Weekly, "After an electromagnetic pulse destroys all electronic devices and billions of folks, the relative few remaining aren't liking their odds. Apart from starvation, natural disasters, and marauding gangs of desperate survivors, there is also the fact that almost all of the young people are now turning into flesh-eating zombies. Bummer. Alex, Tom, and Ellie are three who, at first, escaped all of the possible hazards. Soon, however, Ellie is kidnapped for her bait potential--since children are rare, she's valuable enough to get her abductors admitted to a safe haven. Tom ends up gravely injured, and Alex herself seems to have a range of options that are all actually worse than her life before the pulse (in which she was dying of a brain tumor, just to give some perspective). Readers seeking levity or happy endings are duly warned that this is a grim world and all of the paths are realistically horrific--there really are no quick saves or easy options after the end of the world as the characters know it. While it might have been more comforting had some survivors been heroes, it is to Bick's credit that she sticks with her premise that epic, utter disaster would yield frightened, selfish, dangerous, and deranged individuals, and these are the folks with whom Alex, stubborn and brilliant and achingly relatable, must contend. The gorgeous (and disturbing cover) is sure to grab attention; an impeccable sci-fi/horror balance, quick pace, and risky storytelling all live up to the jacket's promise." --The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, "Splendidly paced apocalyptic zombie horror ends with a thrilling, terrifying cliffhanger and a number of unresolved mysteries." --Kirkus Reviews, "When civilization ends and you're faced with an army of face-eating, nuclear-mutant zombies, having a brain tumor doesn't seem so bad. Alex, orphaned at 17 and dying, decides she's sick of pointless chemo. She bugs out of school for a backpacking trip in the wilderness, determined to make her own end. Just a few days into her trip something terrible happens: A horrible, screeching pain knocks her senseless, kills an elderly backpacker and sends scores of dead birds falling from the sky. Wild dogs in the area seem to have run mad, and did Alex actually see two teenagers eating an old women? Along with two fellow survivors--bratty middle schooler Ellie and Tom, a young soldier on leave--Alex seeks safety. Alex and Tom are both outdoorsy, but for every cache of weapons and MREs they find, another horrible event takes place. Their gun-toting survivalism only keeps them safe for so long in a post-apocalyptic America in which most of the other young people have been Changed to cannibals. The requisite creepy cultist village raises excellent questions of trust and society. Alex can't survive on her Glock alone, she needs supplies, knowledge, allies and affection. Splendidly paced apocalyptic zombie horror ends with a thrilling, terrifying cliffhanger and a number of unresolved mysteries." --Kirkus Reviews, 5Q5P M J S A/YA "Bick takes the best of post-apocalyptic, zombie fiction and adds...the exact thing that has been sorely lacking from those genres: girl power, and in a heaping dose...her heroine faces situations that make the Hunger Games look like a tea party...Bick tugs at heartstrings while gearing up for the next dreadful thing waiting around the corner." --starred, VOYA, "A ragtag group-a teen with an inoperable and terminal brain tumor on a journey to find closure, a young soldier on leave running from personal demons, and an angry little girl whose grandfather has taken her on a backpacking trip after the death of her father-have two important things in common: the electromagnetic pulse that ripped through the sky while they were hiking in the Waucamaw Wilderness didn't kill them, and it did not change them into crazed, flesh-eating zombies. Now they are trying to stay alive and keep as far away from the zombies as possible. However, the greatest threat to their survival may come from other survivors. In the gore, violence, and disturbing societal constructions of this postapocalyptic/zombie thriller, readers will see echoes of Suzanne Collins's 'Hunger Games' series (Scholastic), Patrick Ness's 'Chaos Walking' series (Candlewick), and James Dashner's 'The Maze Runner' series (Delacorte), making this an excellent choice for those searching for more along the same lines. The novel is equal parts horrifying and riveting, and many teens will be compelled to devour it in one sitting. But be forewarned: not a single plot point is wrapped up, so readers who like things neatly solved better wait until the whole trilogy is out." --School Library Journal, "This book is the first in a new dystopian thriller trilogy. The story opens with Alex, a teenage survivalist backpacking to a remote area to scatter her parents' ashes and deal with her own impending death from a brain tumor. However, she becomes an unexpected survivor of an EMP, electromagnetic pulse, that destroys every electronic device and leaves billions of people dead. Forming a small family with a little girl whose grandfather was killed and a young solider named Tom, Alex faces a new and terrifying world. Oh, and did I mention the Zombies? Fans of Hunger Games, and Everlost will be looking for the next book. Ms. Bick has a winner with this series and your students, including reluctant readers, will love it. Highly Recommended." starred review, Library Media Connection, Gripped me from beginning to end dark, creepy and suspenseful. James Dashner, New York Times Best-Selling author of The Maze Runner and The Scorch Trials A haunting and epic story of survival in a shattered world, ASHES is a must read . Michael Grant, New York Times Best-Selling author of Gone "…a harrowing apocalyptic survival tale that brims with true horror….Ashes inhabits the same dark country as The Stand (and is, in fact, delightfully King-esque at times) or Justin Cronin's recent viral apocalypse The Passage …. Bick's ability to convincingly render the mindset of people exposed to horrors and those still living with them makes not just Alex but all the characters around her feel real enough that we ache for them." Locus Magazine The gorgeous (and disturbing cover) is sure to grab attention; an impeccable sci-fi/horror balance, quick pace, and risky storytelling all live up to the jacket's promise. The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books An action-packed tale of an apocalypse unfolding, launching a trilogy with flair . Publishers Weekly Gritty, grim, grotesque, gruesome, gratifying and ultimately deeply satisfying, Ashes is this year''s best ya dystopian novel . Pamela Thompson, El Paso Times Sunday Living Splendidly paced apocalyptic zombie horror ends with a thrilling, terrifying cliffhanger and a number of unresolved mysteries. Kirkus Reviews You won''t want to put it down and, quite frankly, it blows the rest of those dismal-future books clean out of the water. Donna at Bites, www.bitemybooks.com Ashes is disaster done right, it has to be one of the best disaster books I have read in a long while... I cannot recommend this book enough . (Five Stars) www.readforyourfuture.org It''s like the Walking Dead, but in a YA novel…. I can''t wait for the sequel! Hallie Wilkins, age 16, Anderson''s Bookshops Dystopia on steroids, exactly what it should be. Pamela, Hickelbees, San Jose, CA Front and center we have my current obsession, Ilsa Bick''s Ashes, which is like Justin Cronin''s The Passage for the YA set. Suzanna Hermans, co-owner of Oblong Books & Music in Rhinebeck, N.Y If Cormac McCarthy and Justin Cronin bore a lovechild (I read The Passagedirectly following ASHES ), Ilsa J. Bick would be their bouncing baby girl.A. Ragheb, randomactsofreading.com "Great writing. Fantastic plot. Likeable characters. Mt. Everest-type cliffhanger. It all makes for a fabulous book -- for young adult readers and adults alike." Examiner.com (Chicago) " Ashes is one that fans of Suzanne Collins''s trilogy will surely devour. …What will really grab readers is the wonderful narrative that carries Ashes through every shocking, unexpected plot twist. Bick clearly has a natural gift for storytelling, and here she has crafted a compelling story that will suck you in." --- Examiner.com (national) "An easy read with engaging characters and an intriguing plot. …This novel is gripping and intense but very dark…it''s not a book for the faint of heart or young and may leave readers checking for their flashlights and battery-operated radios - just in case." Deseret News, "This book is the first in a new dystopian thriller trilogy. The story opens with Alex, a teenage survivalist backpacking to a remote area to scatter her parents' ashes and deal with her own impending death from a brain tumor. However, she becomes an unexpected survivor of an EMP, electromagnetic pulse, that destroys every electronic device and leaves billions of people dead. Forming a small family with a little girl whose grandfather was killed and a young solider named Tom, Alex faces a new and terrifying world. Oh, and did I mention the Zombies? Fans of Hunger Games, and Everlost will be looking for the next book. Ms. Bick has a winner with this series and your students, including reluctant readers, will love it.Highly Recommended." --starred review, Library Media Connection, "Bick delivers an action-packed tale of an apocalypse unfolding, launching a trilogy with flair. While camping in a national park in Michigan, 17-year-old Alex, a girl coping with a brain tumor and the side effects of its treatment, survives a series of electromagnetic pulses that may have taken out the entire world. Miles from nowhere, she hikes with new companions--an obstinate eight-year-old orphan named Ellie and a young soldier named Tom--as they try to make sense of things. Aside from wrecking their equipment, the pulse has killed most adults and morphed young people into psychotic flesh-eating monsters that are soon dubbed the Changed. Alex is different, too (her formerly dead sense of smell is now nearly supernaturally strong), and the companions worry about their own potential to 'Change' as they attempt to find other survivors. Bick (Draw the Dark) doesn't shy away from gore--one woman's guts 'boiled out in a dusky, desiccated tangle, like limp spaghetti'--but it doesn't derail the story's progress. If readers have any complaint, it will be with the ending, which only sets up the next book." --Publishers Weekly, "Bick has a winner with this series and your students, including reluctant readers, will love it." --starred review, Library Media Connection