rachelmanija: (Books: old)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2019-05-01 11:06 am

The Grounding of Group Six and other strange YA novels

iknowcommawrite has a great review of The Grounding of Group Six, a deeply peculiar YA novel which I bet at least some of you read and were boggled by, and which I loaned her if she'd post on it. Go forth and discuss! (The Grounding of Group 6 on Kindle.)

coffeeandink solves a decades-old mystery for me by naming the book whose name I could never remember, The War Between the Pitiful Teachers and The Splendid Kids, and asks about subversive children's literature.

What books have you read where you thought, for reasons other than that it sucked, "How in the world did this get published?"
cahn: (Default)

[personal profile] cahn 2019-05-02 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I used to reread it fairly frequently in the hopes that eventually, someday, I would figure out wtf was going on. I eventually decided (and this was a while ago, so I might not remember details correctly) that what's going on is that the main character's family is involved in some sort of espionage or ... something? ... and they are put in basically a Witness Protection Program, but the bad guys find them. Narrator is the only survivor and is taken by the... government? bad guys? I am not sure we actually know? and given lots and lots of drugs so that they can figure out whether he knows anything. (I can't remember whether he actually does know anything or not, or whether it's even possible to tell from the book.) The drugs totally screw up his brain so he goes insane and keeps thinking he is escaping (the "trip" he takes on his bicycle), but it's actually all just a big drug-induced hallucination (hence that last scene where all the people in the asylum actually look like the people he saw on his "trip"). I think there's some indication (there's a note most of the way through about how the recommendation is to keep the subject until he "obliterates") that the drugs are messing him up progressively worse and he'll probably eventually just, well, obliterate.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2019-05-02 07:26 pm (UTC)(link)
YUP

LOL I love how we both remembered "obliterates" (the last sentence is something like, "until subject A is terminated or subject A obliterates").