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The Twelve

Cronin, Justin. Book - 2012 Adult Book / Fiction / Thriller / General / Cronin, Justin 1 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 3.8 out of 5

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Call Number: Adult Book / Fiction / Thriller / General / Cronin, Justin
On Shelf At: Westgate Branch

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Westgate Adult Books
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Adult Book / Fiction / Thriller / General / Cronin, Justin 4-week checkout On Shelf

The great viral plague had left a small group of survivors clinging to life amidst a world transformed into a nightmare. Led by the mysterious, charismatic Amy, they go on the attack, leading an insurrection against the virals--the first offensives of the Second Viral War--infiltrating a dozen hives, each presided over by one of the original Twelve. Their secret weapon: Alicia, transformed at the end of book one into a half human, half viral--but whose side, in the end, is she really on?

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COMMUNITY REVIEWS

If you liked The Passage, this will satisfy. submitted by eknapp on January 17, 2013, 9:58am Sequel to The Passage. It has been 100 years since an American military biological weapons program (naturally) inadvertently created a vampire plague which overran North America. A few remaining human colonies are eking out a hardscrabble existence amidst the ruins of civilization.

The format of The Twelve follows that of The Passage. There's another story from the Time Before, followed by a related tale from a century later. Bram Stoker's Dracula is mined for more ideas. We encounter another uniquely crafted colony of survivors.

I'm beginning to suspect Cronin has a bad case of dissociative identity disorder--there seem to be at least three distinct people contributing to his books. First is the Writer: as in the previous installment, the story is nicely detailed and the author seems to know plenty about whatever subject he happens to be writing: oil refinement, propaganda, navigation, whatever. Terrific world-building. Second is the Little Girl Who Loves Unicorns: she's behind the goofy story element in which a wild horse appears out of nowhere and spiritually bonds with an important character (the editor really should have gone after this bit with a chainsaw). Third is Michael Bay: he's responsible for the stupid climax in which lots of things blow up and good guys become unlikely bulletproof killing machines. The whole mess was clumsy and unnecessary. Cronin wrote a wonderfully tense scene earlier in the book involving a human-vs-drac cage match. He should have gone back to whatever place that chapter came from.

My feelings about The Twelve are really mixed. Sometimes I couldn't put it down; at other times it was a chore to pick it back up again. I was moved by the whole beginning-of-the-apocalypse opening involving the struggles of the early survivors, I loved the long detailed denouement, I loved many chapters in between. I hated the way dead characters kept popping back into play like Marvel superheroes (some made sense; others glaringly did not), I hated the way Cronin casually rewrote his vampire mythology to serve short-term plot needs, and I hated his reliance on coincidences to drive the story (yes, I recognize that not EVERYTHING that appeared to be coincidental actually was coincidental). Too many bits felt contrived.

Much like The Passage, this is not exactly a 3-star book; it's a 4.5-star book and a 1.5-star book mixed together. Given how good it sometimes is, I keep hoping for something amazing. I'll probably read book 3 with high hopes, and I'll probably be disappointed again.

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SERIES
Passage trilogy
2.



PUBLISHED
New York : Ballantine Books, 2012.
Year Published: 2012
Description: 564 p.
Language: English
Format: Book

ISBN/STANDARD NUMBER
9780345504982
9780345542373

SUBJECTS
Virus diseases -- Fiction.
Survival -- Fiction.
End of the world -- Fiction.
Human experimentation in medicine -- Fiction.
Suspense fiction.
Epic fiction.