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Teen Fiction - Peoples & Cultures, Teen Fiction - Science Fiction
Yesterday by C. K. Kelly Martin — book cover

Yesterday

by C. K. Kelly Martin
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Overview

THEN: The formation of the UNA, the high threat of eco-terrorism, the mammoth rates of unemployment and subsequent escape into a world of virtual reality are things any student can read about in their 21st century textbooks and part of the normal background noise to Freya Kallas's life. Until that world starts to crumble.

NOW: It's 1985. Freya Kallas has just moved across the world and into a new life. On the outside, she fits in at her new high school, but Freya feels nothing but removed. Her mother blames it on the grief over her father's death, but how does that explain the headaches and why do her memories feel so foggy? When Freya lays eyes on Garren Lowe, she can't get him out of her head. She's sure that she knows him, despite his insistence that they've never met. As Freya follows her instincts and pushes towards hidden truths, the two of them unveil a strange and dangerous world where their days may be numbered. Unsure who to trust, Freya and Garren go on the run from powerful forces determined to tear them apart and keep them from discovering the truth about their shared pasts (and futures), her visions, and the time and place they really came from. Yesterday will appeal to fans of James Dashner's The Maze Runner, Veronica Roth's Divergent, Amy Ryan's Glow, Laini Taylor's Daughter of Smoke and Bone, and Ally Condie's Matched.  

About the Author, C. K. Kelly Martin

C. K. KELLY MARTIN is the critically acclaimed author of I Know It's Over, One Lonely Degree, and The Lighter Side of Life and Death. She lives in the Toronto area with her husband. 

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Editorials

VOYA - Tanya Paglia

Life for sixteen year old Freya, who possesses second sight, is about to do a one-eighty. Her Dad, a Canadian diplomat, is killed in an explosion while they are living abroad. She moves away with her mom to start over. The year is 1985, but to Freya it feels like another dimension. When she encounters Garren, a boy she swears she knows and is determined to approach, he has no recollection of meeting her but reveals that his dad, also a diplomat, was killed on the same day as Freya's. With help from a hypnotist, Freya recounts a familiar past where she had a brother named Latham and a crush on Garren—only this past takes place in the future of 2063, where robots are employed over humans, virtual reality drugs and biological warfare is the norm, and the government erases people's memories using a "wipe and cover" procedure. These people are then sent back through time. At present, they are in danger of regaining their memories, but together they stay strong to face what lies ahead. C.K. Kelly Martin's novel has all the makings of good speculative fiction fused with a nostalgic nod to the music scene of the 1980s. Martin writes of a bleak future that is reminiscent of Aldous Huxley's dystopian classic Brave New World although, Yesterday leaves you wanting more details about Freya's totalitarian past. The love story that develops along with the open ending leaves the reader with a sense that this story is not over. Reviewer: Tanya Paglia

Kirkus Reviews

A vivid infusion of 1980s culture gives this near-future dystopia an offbeat, Philip K. Dick aura. Her father's recent death and the move from New Zealand to Toronto with her mother and sister in 1985 have left Freya Kallas seriously disoriented and plagued by headaches. Worse, her memories have puzzling gaps. She can't recall her best friend Alison's taste in music or how it felt to kiss her old boyfriend, Shane. Some events feel unreal, while others (like the guys who hit on her at parties, something she's sure never happened before) don't engage her. What do Freya's dreams of living another life mean? Something is seriously out of joint, and Freya is sure the boy she spots on a school field trip has the answers she needs. Though she doesn't know his name and he doesn't recognize her, Freya, increasingly desperate, can't let him go. A thicket of exposition slows the narrative briefly, but the pace picks up, and the action accelerates to a gripping climax. Sympathetic, well-drawn characters compensate for a rather flimsy instant dystopia and rubber science. The cultural homage is nostalgic fun, from Care Bears to MacGyver. But for delivering that uniquely '80s flavor, nothing beats music. Fans of the Smiths, Depeche Mode, Scritti Politti--this one's for you. (Dystopian romance. 12 & up)

Publishers Weekly

In Martin’s fifth YA novel, the author pairs a solid romance and an SF premise with mixed results. It’s 1985, and Freya and her family have recently moved to Canada. On Freya’s first day at a new school, the high school sophomore wakes up feeling like her memories of her recent life in New Zealand and the death of her father are somehow artificial. She makes a few friends at school, but is entranced by a gorgeous boy, Garren, certain that she knows him. Garren doesn’t remember Freya, but after she confronts him, they realize that odd coincidences tie them together; exploring these connections leads to threats that bring them closer. A gratuitous prologue undercuts any potential surprise over Freya’s origins for readers, and Martin (My Beating Teenage Heart) further weakens the story with a chapter-long infodump. It’s unfortunate, as there’s a good deal of charm in Freya and Garren’s relationship and the fleshed-out supporting cast (particularly Freya’s mother and her classmates), as well as some well-written action sequences (and one intensely erotic scene) late in the book. Ages 14–up. Agent: Stephanie Thwaites, Curtis Brown. (Sept.)

Children's Literature - Magi Evans

It is 1985, and Freya and her family have just moved to Canada following her diplomat father's death in Australia. Settling into life in a new high school, Freya finds herself curiously unsure about her life in Australia, as if her memories are not real. Then she becomes obsessed with Garren, a boy she sees on the street, convinced that they have met before. When she contacts Garren, he denies knowing her, but recognizes a picture of her grandfather as his own grandfather. Furthermore, his recently deceased father was also a diplomat. With this knowledge, Garren and Freya confront the grandfather, who tells them he can't disclose any information. Suddenly armed men show up and the two teens are forced to run for their lives. Desperate to understand, Freya goes to a hypnotherapist, who helps her to remember that she and Garren lived in the future, when climate change created mass extinctions, and cities were abandoned. Bioterrorism was a constant threat, and in fact it was a sudden epidemic that caused Freya's and Garren's families to be transported back in time for safety, their memories erased for obvious reasons. Knowing that if they are caught, their memories will be erased again, Freya and Garren are determined to find a safe place to start new lives, and vow to work to counteract climate change before the future they escaped happens again. A prologue gives just enough foreknowledge to tantalize readers, and the surprise ending ties everything together satisfyingly. Teen readers will find much to discuss in this thought-provoking story. Reviewer: Magi Evans

School Library Journal

Gr 10 Up—United North America, 2063. Biological weapons and global climate change have left humanity on the brink of destruction. To protect his family, Freya's powerful and politically connected father sends his daughter and his wife back in time to 1985. Upon arriving, Freya does not remember anything about her previous life. Though she feels disconnected, she has no idea she is from the future and mostly believes the lies that shape her new life. But when she sees a familiar boy on a class field trip, she cannot shake the feeling that she knows him from somewhere. Desperate for answers, she follows Garren and questions him, and they discover that their lives and families are eerily similar. When they investigate further, they are forced to run from people who will stop at nothing to erase their memories of 2063-and of each other-forever. Sci-fi thrillers are hot right now, and Yesterday does not disappoint. Featuring a psychic teen running for her life, the novel will appeal to readers who enjoyed Rachel Ward's "Numbers" trilogy (Scholastic). The oppression of 2063 is frighteningly believable; Martin does a good job explaining how the world got so horrific in such a short time. Slow-building suspense and heart-pounding action help keep readers engaged. While the story starts a little slow and unanswered questions abound, patient readers will be rewarded and will clamor for a sequel.—Leigh Collazo, Ed Willkie Middle School, Fort Worth, TX

Book Details

Published
September 25, 2012
Publisher
Random House Children's Books
Pages
368
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780375866500

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