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theurbanwire.com:
the 14th edition |
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The
Supernaturalist by Eoin Colfer By Mary-Ann Russon UrbanWire
The Supernaturalist is about 14-year-old protagonist Cosmo Hill, an orphan living at the "Clarissa Frayne Institute for Parentally Challenged Boys" in Satellite City. Set sometime in the future, Satellite City (which is somewhere in the northern hemisphere) is a modern industrial metropolis built entirely out of grey steel. Satellite City is a twisted depiction of life in the 21st century. Everything here is controlled by a gigantic satellite floating in meta-space (newly discovered outer space). So many accidents occur that now lawyers are an elite task force, designed to reach disasters before the media does, in order to save insurance companies from paying out large claims. Humans no longer drive vehicles - destination routes are programmed via a computer link from the satellite. Privacy is an alien concept with legal spybots flying across the city checking on people in their homes. The sky is a different colour every day depending on what chemical smog is over the city at the time, and acid rain can really kill. If normal life is so bleak, you can imagine what a picnic Cosmo Hill
and the other orphans in the Clarissa Frayne Institute are having. In
order to profit from their young charges, Clarissa Frayne offers them
up as lab rats to corporations who want to test consumer reactions to
their new products and inventions, be it skin care products, processed
food, drugs, TV programmes - anything and everything, regardless of how
inhumane it might be. As the institute is run military-style, escape is
nigh impossible, but every boy dreams of living outside the orphanage
walls.
The gang call themselves "The Supernaturalists". Having dedicated their lives to killing the parasites, they take Cosmo in, accepting him into their unusual "family". Together, they embark on a thrilling action-packed adventure, which entangles them in a tightly woven web of politics, advanced technology and intrigue. One of the hottest fantasy authors today, Eoin Colfer first burst onto
the radar into 2002 with the phenomenal worldwide best-selling novel Artemis
Fowl (which some believe to be the anti-hero to J.K.Rowling's
Harry Potter),
chronicling the adventures of an 11-year-old genius who discovers the
world of fairies, who are more sophisticated than the ones in children's
stories, and plans to steal their gold. |
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