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Streams of Babel by Carol Plum-Ucci
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Streams of Babel (original 2008; edition 2010)

by Carol Plum-Ucci

Series: Streams of Babel (1)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
23812119,992 (3.92)6
Realistic, engaging, characters are full of win. Bioterrorists- a very unexplored plot. Tyler ahd Shahzad are meant for each other. One of the best books I've read this year! AHS/JD
  edspicer | Jan 29, 2010 |
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Great book! ( )
  cygnet81 | Jan 17, 2016 |
Don't drink the water. A statement that makes you wonder doesn't it? Well in Carol Plum-Ucci's novel, Streams Of Babel, you'd be wise to follow that statement in this book. After reading this, it will be somewhat scary to drink from your tap water again.

I would say the best audience for this type of book would probably be young adult to adult because it is somewhat graphic and swear words are used on multiple occasions. However, I think that the graphics and swearing would be the only bad thing about this book. The best thing about this book, I believe, is the amazingly creative plot that keeps changing every chapter as new information is formed. I enjoyed that a lot because it kept me guessing for quite some time, whenever I thought I knew the right answer, I usually ended up being wrong due to some unforeseen event.

The plot of this novel is filled with shocking realizations and suspenseful curiosity that keeps the reader's attention until the very last page. Bioterrorists have poisoned the water supply with Red Vinegar in sections of Colony One. The question is, who are these bioterrorists and what are their motives for slowly killing innocent people? And what in God's name is Red Vinegar and where and what is Colony One? I suggest reading this book if you'd like to know. ( )
  ahsreads | Feb 18, 2011 |
A truly excellent novel about some teens who get sick via a terrorist attack on their water. It's the story of four teens in a small suburb and two computer nerds, one from Pakistan, who do everything they can to save those four other teens. I absolutely loved this book and highly recommend it. ( )
  callmecayce | Oct 11, 2010 |
Realistic, engaging, characters are full of win. Bioterrorists- a very unexplored plot. Tyler ahd Shahzad are meant for each other. One of the best books I've read this year! AHS/JD
  edspicer | Jan 29, 2010 |
As an adult reading this teen fiction/mystery I began to wonder how teenagers think of the world they are living in. This book is set a few months after the 9/11 attacks and now it is nearly a decade since the attacks. How do the teenagers today feel about what happened when they were in early elementary school - if they were not even younger than that. For me, the book follows the thought processes of young people very well. Teenagers from different backgrounds and parts of the world are shown looking at the terrorist situation differently. "Sheltered" American teens who have no clue to the possible extents of (bio)terrorism; medically educated youth who understand but helpless in the face of the possibilities; teens who are very aware - but from behind a computer screen - "see" what is happening through a monitor but never had to face the terror in reality.
This book explores a bio-terror attack in the United States. Of course it is in an idyllic town filled with nice people, and it is a group of teenagers who are most effected. Two teens, one Pakistani and another with a mother who is a spy for North Korea, are brilliant hackers who find out the details of who is behind everything; and they track the bad guys down. Throughout, the adults, either relatives or international operatives with relationships to the teens, are "caretakers" who do not fully understand the depths of emotions the teens have as they live through the terror.
The premise is very realistic and possible. The characters are well written and as a high-school teacher I can say I "know" each of them, even the two non-native-American teens - the hacker geeks. I like this book and highly recommend it to any adult who enjoys teen fiction or to any teen who is looking for a modern mystery to read. ( )
  PallanDavid | Dec 31, 2009 |
Good book for the most part. Too much about trying to catch the spies and not enough about the characters themselves. Skimmed the parts with all the computer and science stuff and mainly read about the kids. ( )
  annekiwi | Nov 2, 2009 |
I loved this book. It was such a wonderful example on how differently cultures treat their children as well as the American prudish nature of treating things and people differently once they are or happen on American soil.

The story line was captivating and well written. I would love to find more books along this line. ( )
  LadySavant2006 | Aug 19, 2009 |
I found this book thrilling, it was a total page-turner. Each chapter is told from a different perspective and as the story goes on you come to see how these stories are connected. The story is tight, the author doesn't go into great detail on each character's backgrounds, which helps the story advance so swiftly. Teens and several adults are afflicted with flu-like symptoms in NJ, meanwhile a teen in Pakistan is creating computer hacking programs and helping a CIA-like US organization track communication from would-be terrorists. Well-written and engaging.
  juliewerks | Jul 23, 2009 |
March, 2002. The United States is still reeling from the September 11 attacks, but hasn't gone to war yet. Are the terrorists still out there? Two mothers on the same street in New Jersey die of brain aneurysms on the same night. Coincidence? Maybe, but then some of their children, Cora Holman and Owen & Scott Eberman, come down with strange symptoms, too. Could this be another terrorist attack? Could it be something in the water? Halfway around the world in Pakistan, Shahzad Hamdani is helping United States Intelligence officers as a v-spy, capturing and translating computer chatter into leads that they can follow up on. Lately, everyone's been talking about the Red Vinegar, which will kill people in "Colony One." Will the connections between Cora, Owen, and Scott's symptoms and the terrorist plot be made in time to save them? Shahzad wants to track down the terrorists at all costs, but what if that cost is his life? This story, told from multiple points of view, will keep you wondering what is going to happen next, and if all of the characters will survive the terrorist plots. ( )
  becker | Feb 2, 2009 |
Book about bioterrorism and tainted water where the people are very very slowly poisoned and die. Reads differently -- it bounces around w/each chapter being the continuing story of one of each of the characters. It is very interesting b/c you get to know the characters, and see how much computers are used to communicate and a lot of the characters are either high school or young adults. A new fresh type of book.
  patriciaj | Nov 14, 2008 |
A Terrorist group has planned to poison the water of a small town in NJ. Their schemes are uncovered with the help of a Pakistani teen hacker. The novel is told in alternating viewpoints of this teen, 3 teens from the town where the water is poisoned, and one other teen appears later in the novel, who has less to do with events. Very interesting read, kept me turning the pages, lots of character development and a very, very human story. ( )
  chibimajo | Aug 18, 2008 |
When people in a small New York town begin to get sick with a mysterious flu, and a couple of them die, Scott, a member of the CDC, decides to try to figure out what's behind it. Could it be the tap water? Is it part of a terrorist plot?

Meanwhile, in Pakistan, a teen computer wiz is working as a spy to track down the origin of some terrorist chatter. What he disscovers could be related to the mysterious illnesses. ( )
  ShellyPYA | May 31, 2008 |
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