Lithium
by Asina C is not the typical book style that comes to mind when I
think about a fiction book based in Chernobyl. Normally I would
expect such a book to be full of zombies or mutants who go around
terrorizing a group of tourist that get lost but that is not the case
with Lithium. Instead, this book mixes truth with science and a little
bit of fantasy and gives readers a different type of story altogether. This book also talks about the Red Forest in Chernobyl and
it sparked an interest in me to look up some pictures of the forest.
I also did not notice too much that widely away from the actual facts
about Chernobyl, though I would by no means consider myself to be
well informed on the subject.
Zurin
has lived with her mother for all of her twelve years in a small
shack in Pripyat. Her mother has always kept Zurin inside her home
for fear of radiation sickness and being seen. This is in part
because the area in which they live is believed to be uninhabitable
because of all the radiation still in everything following the
explosion. Zurin has always been obedient to her mother’s rules
until one day when her mother goes to get supplies and Zurin decides
to step outside for the first time but may have been seen by someone.
Then
one day, shortly after her birthday Zurin wakes up to find her mother
gone and blood on the floor. Zurin then ventures out into the Red
Forest in search of her mother but gets extremely lost and succumbs
to radiation sickness. Luckily she is found by a young couple who
work for a travel company and snuck into a restricted area of
Chernobyl to take pictures for their website. The couple takes Zurin
to the hospital and adopts her once she gets better. As fate would
have it months later Zurin returns to Pripyat in search of her mother
yet again and finds herself in an abandoned hospital. It is in this
hospital that she learns the truth about her mother and her life up
to this point. Her only hope is to team up with a doctor she is not
completely trusting of, the young couple, and a man she has never met
before.
What
I liked best was the idea of people still
being able to live in a highly irradiated area such as Pripyat with
few side effects was interesting. The book also offered some mystery
as to who Zurin and her mother are and why they chose to continue to
live in an isolated area such a Pripyat. What I liked least was a
little more complicated. I understand the fact that people exposed to
nuclear radiation and or uranium may mutate both physically and/or
mentally if they survive. What I did not understand was Nikolav’s
goal by purposefully mutating the patients who survived the explosion
but were trapped in the mental ward of the hospital.
This
is definitely a young adult book, but for many, after high school, I
feel like it would quickly lose its strong appeal. It is a good book
but I feel like it would need to be a little more detailed, making
the book a bit longer in order for it to have more of an appeal to
adults. I ended up rating this book a 2 out of 4. This is because
while I enjoy books set around Chernobyl (especially if mutated
people or zombies are involved because it offers a plausible
explanation for it) this book fell short of my expectations. One of
the main issues I had was how the book fails to give solid reasoning
and jumps from one topic to another.
This book can be found here : Lithium | Book| Austin Macauley Publishers
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