Reviews

The Prince Who Fell from the Sky by John Claude Bemis

sammishgirl's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

My first post-apocalyptic children's book, and it was good. I liked that it left a lot of unanswered questions, and didn't add some epilogue that explained things from the humans point of view. You know what the bear knows, and that's it. Ripe for a sequel!

book_nut's review

Go to review page

4.0

If not the most brilliant, certainly the most unique post-apocalyptic story I've read.

olim777's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous emotional hopeful lighthearted mysterious reflective relaxing fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

nairam1173's review

Go to review page

3.0

Really interesting ideas and combinations of things--animal fantasy/Jungle Book-esque with post-apocalyptic, for one--and some ambiguity without being irritating about how things became this way and where things might be going.

But it has a fairly predictable plot and nothing really stands out about the characters or prose.

booksandbosox's review

Go to review page

3.0

http://librarianosnark.blogspot.com/2012/05/review-prince-who-fell-from-sky.html

le13anna's review

Go to review page

5.0

The only hopeful post apocalyptic story I have ever read.

reader_fictions's review

Go to review page

2.0

Originally reviewed here.

As you may know by now, I don't generally read book blurbs before starting books. I saw the tag dystopia and requested this immediately without knowing pretty much anything. Despite the bear on the cover, I was still really confused when I started reading and it was a bunch of bears talking to one another. Very strange.

In a dystopian world where humans are thought to have died out, the animals have gone all Animal Farm. Wolves are the rulers of this landscape, controlling boundaries and determining which predators are allowed to stay in their territory. The wolves' control stems from their strength, the fact that they're pack-based (there's a lot of them) and that they helped kill off the last humans, decimated by an infection and who knows what else. All the wild animals have serious contempt for Faithfuls, basically pets.

The bears have an uneasy truce with the reigning wolf pack in the area. Casseomae, an old female bear, is chatting with a rat, Dumpster, one day, having just saved him from some hungry coyotes, when something crashes to the ground nearby. Inside the thing are some of the Skinless (aka "Old Devils" or humans). The crash has killed all but one, a Skinless cub. Casseomae's mothering instincts kick in and she determines to save this creature, which every other animal in the forest wants to kill, except for Dumpster and later a dog named Pang. This odd team works together to save the child.

I never really got over the sense of strangeness as I read this. In no way is it bad, and I think the concept is fascinating, but it never really worked for me. Partly, I think that this is largely because it doesn't seem to be targeted at a particular age group. It's being marketed as middle grade, but I question that somewhat. The fact that the main characters are animals, and the child's age, which is indeterminate but seems young, would recommend the book to children. However, the violence of the story (especially since it's animals being hurt) would lead me to think it would be best for older readers, who might not be so interested in an animal tale.

The Prince Who Fell from the Sky is rather reminiscent of Ice Age, although humans are the ones dying out in that one. Even the main character grouping is fairly similar to Ice Age: child, bear (to replace mammoth - able to carry others and fight), rat (similar to the sloth in usefulness physically, but Dumpster is also a compendium of knowledge), and dog (not as useful as the sabretooth I'll admit). It's kind of like a dystopian mashup of Ice Age and The Incredibly Journey. So if that sounds appealing to you, definitely check this out.
More...