TITLE: FUSE
AUTHOR: JULIANNA BAGGOTT
Pages: 554
Date: 19/02/2013
Grade: 4.5
Details: no. 2 Pure
Received from Headline Publishing
Through Nudge
Own / ARC
In this, the second book in the Pure trilogy, we meet
our protagonists where we left them at the end of the book one. Pressia is
with Bradwell for whom she is developing feelings she doesn’t recognise or
trust and trying to come to terms with the fact that she’s recently found and
lost her mother, discovered that her father may still be alive and the
existence of her half-brother, Partridge who is a Pure, from the Dome and the
son of Willux, the man who caused the destruction of the world.
Partridge is still living outside the Dome and glad to
be spending time close to Lyda, the Pure girl he loves. He is also devastated
following the brutal death of his mother and brother; deaths ordered by his
father. But his mother left him with something; three vials containing the
first step in a cure for the damage done by the detonations. If they can find
the next two steps it might be possible to undo the devastation his father has
caused, but their chances seem slim.
Partridge’s father wants his son back and is not
beyond keeping all of the people outside the Dome hostage to achieve his goal.
Willux has plans for his son and nothing or nobody is going to stop him from
achieving them. Faced with a possible massacre among the Wretches he has
come to recognise as different but very worthy humans, Partridge has no choice
but to submit to his father’s demands. He has to go back inside and hope that
he will be able to fight the battle against his father’s evil plans from there.
Meanwhile Pressia, Bradwell, El
Capitan and his brother Helmud leave on a seemingly impossible
quest to find the ingredients and formula needed to create the cure. Piecing
together clues left behind a long time ago they have to travel far into unknown
and dangerous territories with no guarantees that they will achieve their goal
or survive.
With the odds stacked against them in a volatile and
dangerous world this small group of people is all the hope of survival the
world has. And in the middle of violence, loss and danger these youngsters also
have to come to terms with new and confusing feelings; emotions that appear to
be as likely to hurt them as bring them to happiness.
Allow me to start with a warning before I get to my
thoughts on this book. Do yourself a favour; (re)read “Pure” and re-acquaint
yourself with the story and the characters before starting this book. It took
me quite a while to get everything and everybody back in perspective. But by
the time I realised that I should have gone back to the first book before
starting “Fuse” I was so far into the book that putting it aside was
impossible.
Because that is the sort of story this is; it grabs
you by the throat and doesn’t let go. The way in which this devastated world is
described is vivid and all the more heart-breaking for it. It is almost too
easy to picture the poor people who were outside the Dome when the detonations
came and are now fused to whatever was closed to them at the time; a dolls head
where her hand should be for Pressia; birds on Bradwell’s back; Helmud attached
to his, brother El Capitan; and all the Mothers with their children permanently
fused to their bodies. The destructed landscape, filled with danger and newly
formed creatures is just as easy to picture, and this only gets easier when the
author introduces recognisable landmarks. Julianne Baggott did a
heartbreakingly thorough job of building this world and its inhabitants.
The characters in this book aren’t especially easy to
like but given the circumstances that makes perfect sense. In this world the
only way to survive is by looking after number one and being suspicious of
everything and everyone. Sentimentality is a luxury people living outside the
Dome can’t afford and people inside the Dome have given up on a long time ago.
But as you get to know Pressia, Partridge, Bradwell and the others better you
realise that what at first appeared to be brutal and harsh attitudes are in
fact necessary characteristics if they want to have a chance at surviving and
succeeding. And in the midst of all this darkness there is room for occasional
light and love:
“Now I feel like we
weren’t made for each other. We’re making each other – into the people we
should become.” (Bradwell to Pressia)
Because ultimately these are just fragile human beings
doing the best they can in an impossible situation.
I liked the way in which the author took her time while
developing the characters and the story. A picture is built with great
attention to detail, using beautiful and vivid words and images. This allows
the reader to come to a real understanding of this world and the people that
inhabit it. I also appreciate that this book doesn’t end on a massive
cliff-hanger. While it is clear that the story is far from over when Fuse ends,
things are left at a relatively peaceful place. And since it is going to be
hard enough waiting for the third and final book to come out, I can only be
grateful that the author didn’t make it any harder than it had to be.
This is a very well written dystopian novel, made all
the more brilliant by the fact that the devastation, its cause and its
aftermath are all to easy to believe and imagine. The reader should be prepared
to be fascinated and horrified in equal measure.
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