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Review of Seed Savers-Unbroken

June 23, 2020 by admin

Seed Savers-Unbroken, the final book in author Sandra Smith’s Seed Savers series, is fast approaching the one year anniversary of its release.

We recently spotted a review we want to share here to celebrate. Thank you to Jemima Pett for the awesome shoutout for Seed Savers! (Original Post Here)

The Seed Savers series by Sandra Smith has been one of my joys to read over the last few years. I didn’t really understand Sandy’s use of the Bible as a teaching method in book 1, but now I realise that it was essential, as the only free speech allowed in this totalitarian world.

Through Treasure, Lily, Heirloom and Keeper, I’ve followed Sandy’s progress, and welcomed the commercial success she’s had in getting a traditional publisher.

Now the series has come to an end, Sandy’s blog is as encouraging and inspiring to new seed savers as her characters. Sandy is one of the MG BookElves, by the way.  I find it a little strange that we both started our series at the same time, and ended them with revolution!

I finished this book at the end of May, and nearly kept this review for 4th July, but I’d deliberately read it for #30 Days Wild, and that won in the end.

Seed Savers – Unbroken (Seed Savers #5)

seed savers - unbroken

by Sandra Smith (S.Smith on Goodreads)

IMAGINE A FUTURE WHERE GROWING FOOD IS A CRIME

Although kidnapped by GRIM in an effort to strike back at her father–escaped former leader of the Seed Savers Movement–Lily quickly escapes with the help of sometime friend Rose. The girls camp out in Forest Park while plans are made for a safe rendezvous.

Meanwhile, Jason and Monroe join up with the questionable group Radicle, using their Monitor skills to hack into suppressed information in an effort to topple an overreaching government. Tension rises amid massive protests as Independence Day approaches.

Will lost freedoms such as food rights and an open media be reclaimed? Don’t miss the explosive final installment of Seed Savers!

My Review

Like most series of any length, the final book is not a stand-alone read. In this case, Keeper was pretty much a cliff-hanger, and so Unbroken picks up where it left off. You cannot come to this book cold, although I picked up who was who and what had happened almost immediately. I read Keeper five years ago, so it’s a miracle! As you know, in several books I’ve read, I can’t do that from chapter to chapter. This indicates that the author has rounded her characters and given them traits which resound in your brain.

Seed Savers is set in a world where our governments have made growing food illegal. Most people have forgotten that food even comes from plants, and cooking is unknown. But it emerges that this scenario is only for the general populace: the elite have a totally different lifestyle.  With some characters hacking government computers, others spreading the information between interested parties, the scene is set for an explosive outcome.

logical development

This is an entirely valid future scenario, and it shows in the detail. Our story hackers unearth government memos and papers dating back to the 1980s – ancient history in the arc of the story – and scientific papers from the early 2000s that are factually based. The development from there and the sociological changes are logical and horrifying. Or would be, had not the pace of government iniquity raced ahead and put us in scenarios now that we once thought impossible. I told Sandy at the start I thought she’d set it a little late. Without our vigilance, this could well be a world we are living in within twenty years.

add to goodreads button

Seed Savers is not only a great MG series, but essential reading for all citizens of the world. Unbroken brings us to a satisfying end, with plenty of pace, confusion, and danger. Congratulations, Sandra Smith, for an excellent and timely exposition of what could get even worse if we are not vigilant. And all wrapped up in an enjoyable children’s book. She’s a master of allegory.

And the denouement takes place on July 4th. Hence my posting date dilemma!

Filed Under: Authors, Middle Grade Books, reviews, Uncategorized Tagged With: author Jemima Pett, author Sandra Smith, Book Birthday, Book Reviews 2020, Book Series for Kids, Demonstrations, Fourth of July, freedom of the press, futuristic, Garden, middle grade books, Revolution, science fiction, Seed Savers Series, social commentary in literature

Midwest Book Review!

September 22, 2019 by admin

In July, three more books in the Seed Savers series received glowing reviews from Midwest Book Review!

Seed Savers-Lily
9781943345090, $12.99 PB, $5.99 Kindle, 182pp

Synopsis: When her friends disappear under mysterious circumstances, thirteen-year-old Lily sets out to discover more about the secret organization with which they were involved. Her investigation unearths a disturbing secret from her own past, unsettling her world even more. In the meantime, Lily makes a new friend and falls for a mysterious young man even as she remains unsure whom to trust. As her world crashes down around her, Lily struggles to decide what to do next. Lily is volume two of the Seed Savers series but can easily be read out of order. It is is a suspenseful and reflective book with themes of self-empowerment, trust, acceptance of diversity, gardening, and politics.


Seed Savers-Heirloom
9781943345113, $14.99 PB, $5.99 Kindle, 274pp

Synopsis: It’s late in the twenty-first century and large corporations have merged with U.S. government agencies to control the nation’s food supply. Gardening is illegal and most people no longer know what real food is. Thirteen-year-old Clare and her brother Dante have escaped to Canada where the old ways still exist. There they make friends with the roguish Jason and learn the political history of their own country’s decline of freedoms. Meanwhile, Lily, the friend who was left behind, begins a journey to find the father she never met – a former leader in the ill-fated Seed Savers rebellion of fifteen years earlier. From Florida to the Smoky Mountains, Lily follows the signs in search of her father and is helped along the way by the quirky characters she meets. Not to mention the attractive Arturo who shows up midway to “protect” her. Heirloom (the third volume in the Seed Savers series) seamlessly weaves the gentle agrarian story of Clare and Dante together with the swiftly-paced adventure of Lily and Arturo. Themes of family, empowerment, and politics meet in this futuristic tale nostalgic for the past.

Seed Savers-Keeper
9781943345175, $14.99 PB, $5.99 Kindle, 254pp

Synopsis: Beginning in a Pacific Islander village of climate refugees hidden deep in the Smoky Mountains and ending in an underground bunker in Portland’s Forest Park, Keeper is the fast-paced fourth installment in the Seed Savers series. In Keeper, GRIM appears to be crumbling only to be replaced by FRND (the Food Resources & Nutrition Department), a corporate-sponsored program with a more friendly public face. The Seed Savers Movement is on the verge of splintering as James Gardener’s fugitive status is viewed by some as a liability, while others don’t trust the mysterious JALIL. Trinia Nelson is bent on finding James and will stop at nothing. Earth Day parades turn into protests and someone is leaking classified government documents. Meanwhile, Lily, Clare, and Dante, shut up in the bunker, become restless and begin sneaking out. In the park they run into Rose, an acquaintance from summer tutoring. Will their desire to rekindle the friendship lead to forgiveness, or will it end in betrayal?

Critique: An impressively original, deftly crafted, and thoroughly entertaining series by Sandra Smith, these three volumes (each of which can stand alone and be read out of sequence) will prove to be immediate and enduringly popular additions to personal, family, school and community library collections for young readers ages 8-12.

Thank you Midwest Book Review! To read Midwest’s review of Seed Savers-Treasure, go here.

Filed Under: Authors, Middle Grade Books, reviews Tagged With: 2019 new books, fiction, mglit, Midwest Book Review, Sandra Smith author, scifi, Seed Savers Series, YA

Midwest Book Review of Treasure

March 25, 2019 by admin

This just in!

Children’s Bookwatch: March 2019
James A. Cox, Editor-in-Chief
Diane Donovan, Editor
Midwest Book Review
278 Orchard Drive, Oregon, WI 53575

http://www.midwestbookreview.com/cbw/mar_19.htm#StoryMonstersInk

The Story Monsters Ink Shelf
www.storymonsters.com

Seed Savers: Treasure
Sandra Smith
Flying Books House
https://flyingbookshouse.com
9781943345052 $10.99 pbk / $5.99 Kindle amazon.com

Diana Perry, Reviewer:
It’s 2077. There’s no apocalypse, but some things are different. Things like the weather, the Internet, and food. In 12-year-old Clare’s world, blueberry is just a flavor and apples are found only in fairy tales. Then one day Clare meets a woman who teaches her about seeds and real food. With Ana’s guidance, Clare and her friends learn about gardening. When the authorities discover the children’s forbidden tomato plant and arrest their mother, Clare and her brother begin a lonely cross-country journey that tests them both physically and spiritually. Can they help change the world? What a fun-to-read series that teaches the importance of growing our own food. It leaves young readers excited to read the next one. (Ages 9-12)

Filed Under: Middle Grade Books, reviews Tagged With: book series, fiction, gardening, middle grade books, Midwest Book Review, new middle grade books, Sandra Smith, Story Monsters Inc

Seed Savers-Treasure is a Benjamin Franklin Award Finalist!

March 23, 2019 by admin

Flying Books House is pleased to announce that Seed Savers-Treasure has made it to the finalist round for a Benjamin Franklin Award. The awards ceremony will take place April 5 in Chicago.

Read more about it here.

Good luck to author Sandra Smith!

Filed Under: Authors, Awards, Middle Grade Books

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