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THE City of Ember by Jeanne Du Prau
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THE City of Ember (edition 2003)

by Jeanne Du Prau

Series: Books of Ember (1)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations / Mentions
10,689412660 (3.85)1 / 265
In the year 241, twelve-year-old Lina trades jobs on Assignment Day to be a Messenger to run to new places in her decaying but beloved city, perhaps even to glimpse Unknown Regions.
Member:sakersad
Title:THE City of Ember
Authors:Jeanne Du Prau
Info:Random House (2003), Paperback, 270 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:
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Work Information

The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau (Author)

  1. 150
    The Giver by Lois Lowry (FFortuna)
    FFortuna: The Giver is much darker, but these are similar in premise.
  2. 81
    The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins (Bitter_Grace)
  3. 50
    The People of Sparks by Jeanne DuPrau (moongrove2)
    moongrove2: It is the sequal
  4. 40
    Uglies by Scott Westerfeld (Bitter_Grace, goodiegoodie)
  5. 20
    Running Out of Time by Margaret Peterson Haddix (Runa, HollyMS)
  6. 21
    Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O'Brien (atimco)
    atimco: Z for Zachariah treats the same basic theme — the destruction of earth and what the characters must do to survive — but O'Brien's book is much more sophisticated. It's probably not the greatest for young readers, but an adult will find much to enjoy here.
  7. 00
    Redwall by Brian Jacques (FFortuna)
    FFortuna: Mostly dissimilar, but the Redwall books deal with the same kinds of puzzles if that's the draw.
  8. 00
    The House of Power by Patrick Carman (Yehudit)
  9. 00
    Devil on My Back by Monica Hughes (Shanshad)
  10. 00
    The Adoration of Jenna Fox by Mary E. Pearson (missmaddie)
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    The Danger Quotient by Annabel Johnson (SunnySD)
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    The Magic Thief by Sarah Prineas (FFortuna)
  15. 13
    Prince Caspian by C. S. Lewis (afyfe)
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» See also 265 mentions

English (406)  Spanish (1)  All languages (407)
Showing 1-5 of 406 (next | show all)
Independent Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Awards: Nebraska Golden Sower Award (Nominee — 2006)
Young Hoosier Book Award (Winner — Intermediate — 2006)
Young Hoosier Book Award (Nominee — Middle Grade — 2006)
Massachusetts Children's Book Award (Nominee — 2007)
Commonwealth Club of California Book Awards (Winner — Young Adult — 2003)
Sequoyah Book Award (Nominee — Children's — 2006)
Rebecca Caudill Young Readers' Book Award (Nominee — 2006)
Triple Crown Awards (Winner — 2006)
Georgia Children's Book Award (Finalist — 2008)
Great Stone Face Book Award (Nominee — 2005)
Utah Beehive Book Award (Winner — Children's Fiction — 2005)
Kentucky Bluegrass Award (Nominee — Grades 3-5 — 2006)
Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award (Nominee — Grades 6-8 — 2005)
Sasquatch Book Award (Nominee — 2006)
Charlie May Simon Children's Book Award (Honor Book — 2006)
Pacific Northwest Library Association Young Reader's Choice Award (Nominee — Intermediate — 2006)
Buckeye Children's & Teen Book Award (Nominee — Grades 6-8 — 2007)
William Allen White Children's Book Award (Winner — Grades 6-8 — 2006)
William Allen White Children's Book Award (Nominee — Grades 6-8 — 2005-2006)
Nutmeg Book Award (Winner — Intermediate — 2006)
Vermont Golden Dome Book Award (Nominee)
Iowa Teen Award (Nominee — 2006)
Bluestem Award (Nominee — 2019)
Mark Twain Readers Award (Winner — 2006)
Sunshine State Young Reader's Award (Winner — 2005)
Nēnē Award (Nominee — 2008, 2009)
Judy Lopez Memorial Award for Children's Literature (Honor Book — 2004)
Nevada Young Readers' Award (Nominee — Intermediate — 2006)
Garden State Teen Book Award (Winner — Grades 6-8 — 2006)
Grand Canyon Reader Award (Nominee — Teen — 2006)
Colorado Blue Spruce Award (Nominee — 2008)
Land Of Enchantment Book Award (Winner — Young Adult — 2007)
Black-Eyed Susan Book Award (Winner — Grades 6-9 — 2006)
Flicker Tale Award (Nominee — Juvenile Books — 2006)
Colorado Children's Book Award (Nominee — 2006)
Maud Hart Lovelace Award (Nominee — 2006)
Rhode Island Teen Book Award (Nominee — 2005)
South Carolina Book Awards (Nominee — Junior Book Award — 2007)
  warnackle10 | Apr 10, 2024 |
This book is a great book for middle schoolers because it adds concepts of science and fiction to keep the readers engaged in what they are reading. This book is full of adventure and is exciting, while it also educational. It is a great book to use for a read-aloud. ( )
  madelinefames | Apr 3, 2024 |
Sometimes you need a YA to cleanse the palate..... ( )
  jazzbird61 | Feb 29, 2024 |
It's a world with no sun, lit only by electricity. But the generator is dying and the citizens of Ember don't know what to do. 12-year-old Lina discovers an ancient document that may be the secret to surviving Ember's decay, but time is running out. This book's a page turner, a mystery, and a thought-provoker. ( )
  LibrarianDest | Jan 3, 2024 |
I'm tempted to attribute the dumbed down world building, logic flaws, and flat characters to the fact that this is written as children's literature, but I've read far too many excellent stories in that category to accept that children don't need or deserve better. Much of the ignorance of the people of Ember is explained at the end - that the adults who were chosen to populate that world were under strict orders to not pass on knowledge of the world before, but that just seems like a cop-out to me. Children ask questions, and their caregivers didn't have anyone preventing them from answering after they were dropped off in Ember. There was no satisfactory explanation for why the Builders demanded that their history be erased. In fact, it's nonsensical, if they expected that their descendants would need to emerge from Ember and re-integrate into the outside world some 200 years later. This is just one of the many logical flaws that kept me disengaged from the book. The characters and their relationships with one another had no depth. Lina feels very little grief for her grandmother, and forgets her death almost immediately. She seems to feel very little for her sister except concern when the child wanders off and is lost. When she refuses to leave Ember without her sister later, it seems borne of a sense of responsibility rather than any actual connection. She might as well have been refusing to leave without her only pair of shoes. I finished the story mostly because it was on audio and kept me company while doing some chores around the house, but if I had been actually reading the book, I probably would have put it down halfway through and not picked it up again. ( )
  Doodlebug34 | Jan 1, 2024 |
Showing 1-5 of 406 (next | show all)
While a book like ''Faerie Wars'' diverts young readers from their daily lives, one like ''The City of Ember'' encourages them to tackle the most ambitious tasks. Hard work can save the day, it promises. It's an old-fashioned lesson that is somehow easier to swallow when delivered in a futuristic setting.
 

» Add other authors (7 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
DuPrau, JeanneAuthorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Dillon, WendyNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Riely, ChrisCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Verhulst, WillemTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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When the city of Ember was just built and not yet inhabited, the chief builder and the assistant builder, both of them weary, sat down to speak of the future.
Quotations
In the city of Ember, the sky was always dark. The only light came from great floodlamps mounted on the buildings and at the top of poles in the middle of the larger squares.
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Information from the Dutch Common Knowledge. Edit to localize it to your language.
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In the year 241, twelve-year-old Lina trades jobs on Assignment Day to be a Messenger to run to new places in her decaying but beloved city, perhaps even to glimpse Unknown Regions.

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Average: (3.85)
0.5 1
1 20
1.5 10
2 139
2.5 26
3 567
3.5 147
4 963
4.5 112
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