Reviews

Midnight at the Electric by Jodi Lynn Anderson

christina_mac's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional hopeful sad medium-paced

3.75

abbyl819's review against another edition

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3.0

I did enjoy reading this book while I was reading it, I was never bored or had to force myself to finish. However, I’m not satisfied with the ending, as there are a lot of loose threads that we will never know the answer to, although I think this was the point of the story to do this. My favorite person to read about was Adri and I would love to read about her on Mars, as I think it would be really interesting and unique. Considering it is the title, I assumed that the Electric would have a way larger significance than it actually did, but it was barely present.

hollyxbear's review against another edition

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5.0

I recently had to weed this from the library but thought it sounded interesting so I read it. I was so engrossed, I finished it in 3 hours. I wish the teens at the library would have checked it out more but at least I got to read it! The characters were actually pretty relatable! and I loved the historical aspects to it.

votesforwomen's review against another edition

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3.0

I....don't exactly know what to think of this book.

It was a historical set in the time of World War I, the story of a girl struggling to recover from the death of her brother during the war.

It was a desperate survival tale of the Dust Bowl and two sisters fighting to make it to the next day.

It was a futuristic tale of a girl preparing to go to help create a colony on Mars.

The three stories wove together in an altogether satisfying way. I think my biggest beef with this book was that it was too short, but somehow, the length was also perfect. I'm not really sure how both those things are true at once. #PARADOXES

I think Catherine's story was my favorite. I loved her, and I loved Beezie, and I felt for their poor mother. The other two were good, but fell a little flatter, at least for me. Again, not sure why.

I'm giving this book 3.5 stars because I don't really know how I feel about it. It was good, it really was. But...I'm just not sure.

CONTENT:
Some kissing. It's implied that a guy and a girl sleep together--pregnancy results, but the actual act is never shown. A couple of uses of the long a-word. Overall, /fairly/ clean?

francescaranck's review against another edition

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3.0

Ok, so before I delve deep into the whole opinion on it, I have to say there was like a bad word or two, though nothing like horrible-horrible, so just know that. Anyway besides that, overall it was pretty good, but I can't say that I really loved it, but not because anything was bad about it. I just don't think it was quite my type. I just didn't feel like I related to it. Nevertheless, it was a decent read in the different characters and how, while in entirely different times, they are connected. And the difference in characters was interesting ( I thought Lily was entertaining). So if you pick up this book, I would say go for it and give it a try, but just that I didn't particularly love it or hate it. Good luck!

arp363's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful mysterious reflective

5.0

izzys_internet_bookshelf's review against another edition

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3.0

3/5

I was excited going on this book but I found it to be slow for such a short book. It was hard to piece things together but overall I would want to someday reread it.

jigsaw's review against another edition

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adventurous reflective medium-paced

5.0

myriadreads's review against another edition

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4.0

I really enjoyed this one, and zipped right through it. It's 2065, and Kansas is the home of the space program. Adri has been chosen as a colonist to Mars, a high honor, but connecting with her family history raises questions that she's never considered. The story flashes from a grim future to the gritty past of the dust bowl, slowly unfolding a mystery that kept me turning pages past my bedtime to the conclusion. Strongest features: relationships between women, a multi-generational family story, grounded in history, and beautifully written.
Adri is a difficult character to connect to, both in the story and for me as a reader, so the book was a slow starter. Stick with it until you get to the first letters and journal entries. If you're drawn to the sci-fi element, just know that there isn't much on the actual space travel or colonization of Mars. It's a book that feels very close to home.

stephaniealysse's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0