The Fog Diver (Fog Diver, 1)
The Fog Diver (Fog Diver, 1) book cover

The Fog Diver (Fog Diver, 1)

Hardcover – May 26, 2015

Price
$19.79
Format
Hardcover
Pages
336
Publisher
HarperCollins
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0062352934
Dimensions
5.5 x 1.09 x 8.25 inches
Weight
12.8 ounces

Description

From School Library Journal Gr 4–6—It's been years since the formation of the deadly Fog that drove the last people from the surface of the Earth. The only remaining humans live in towns high in the mountaintops. With few resources, it's a hard life. For a slum kid like Chess, working on a salvage airship is the best way to keep from starving. As his ship's tetherboy, Chess must dive into the Fog and recover relics from Earth that can be traded for food for his crew. Most tether boys don't last a year. Those who avoid the Fog sharks eventually succumb to Fog sickness in the end. All except Chess. For Chess, the Fog never hurts. Chess's deepest secret is that he was born in the Fog, and it has marked him. His whole life, Chess has kept his head down and avoided notice. Now things are changing. Mrs. E., Chess's guardian, is dying of Fog sickness, and Chess and his friends must race against the clock to get her to the cure. Unfortunately, the greedy Lord Kodoc has found out about Chess's affinity for Fog and has made other plans. With plenty of action, and characters who are as precocious as they are prodigious at their airship duties, this is a fun beginning to a unique new series. An abundance of pop culture references gone hilariously wrong add appeal for reluctant readers. Oh, and there are air pirates! VERDICT A solid choice for fans of adventure series or speculative fiction.—Liz Overberg, Darlington School, Rome, GA “Ross wastes no time with his worldbuilding, establishing Chess and his crew as a misfit found family working the Fog by day and sharing stories by night. It’s a fresh approach, reminiscent of Dickens…the only thing missing is a sequel, which readers hope won’t be far behind. ” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “With plenty of action, and characters who are as precocious as they are prodigious at their airship duties, this is a fun beginning to a unique new series. An abundance of pop culture references gone hilariously wrong add appeal for reluctant readers. Oh, and there are air pirates!” — School Library Journal “Complex, lovable characters; a magical, dangerous world; and a struggle to survive against overwhelming odds. I couldn’t put it down!” — Sage Blackwood, author of the Jinx trilogy “Fast-paced and clever, filled with brave, talented characters―my favorite! It’s a classic adventure novel with a postapocalyptic flair and witty reimaginings of modern folklore.” — Merrie Haskell, author of The Castle Behind Thorns A deadly white mist has cloaked the earth for hundreds of years. Humanity clings to the highest mountain peaks, where the wealthy Five Families rule over the crowded slums and rambling junkyards. As the ruthless Lord Kodoc patrols the skies to enforce order, thirteen-year-old Chess and his crew scavenge in the Fog-shrouded ruins for anything they can sell to survive. Hazel is the captain of their salvage raft: bold and daring. Swedish is the pilot: suspicious and strong. Bea is the mechanic: cheerful and brilliant. And Chess is the tetherboy: quiet and quick . . . and tougher than he looks. But Chess has a secret, one he's kept hidden his whole life. One that Lord Kodoc is desperate to exploit for his own evil plans. And even as Chess unearths the crew's biggest treasure ever, they are running out of time. Joel Ross creates a thrilling and action-packed adventure in a future in which living in the sky is the new reality and a few determined slumkids just might become heroes. Joel Rossxa0is the author of The Fog Diver , which received the Cybils Award and the YouPer Award from the Michigan Library Association and was named to the Texas Bluebonnet Award Master List. He is also the author of The Lost Compass as well as two World War II thrillers for adults (Double Cross Blind and White Flag Down ). He lives in Santa Barbara, California, with his wife, Lee Nichols, who is also a full-time writer, and their son, Ben, who is a full-time kid. To find out more information, go to www.fogdiver.com. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Joel Ross debuts a thrilling adventure series in which living in the sky is the new reality and a few determined slum kids just might become heroes. This Texas Bluebonnet selection—a fantasy filled with daring and hope and a wonderfully imaginative world—is perfect for fans of Rick Riordan and Brandon Mull.
  • Once the Fog started rising, the earth was covered with a deadly white mist until nothing remained but the mountaintops. Now humanity clings to its highest peaks, called the Rooftop, where the wealthy Five Families rule over the lower slopes and floating junkyards.
  • Thirteen-year-old Chess and his friends Hazel, Bea, and Swedish sail their rickety air raft over the deadly Fog, scavenging the ruins for anything they can sell to survive. But now survival isn't enough. They must risk everything to get to the miraculous city of Port Oro, the only place where their beloved Mrs. E can be cured of fogsickness. Yet the ruthless Lord Kodoc is hot on their trail, for Chess has a precious secret, one that Kodoc is desperate to use against him. Now Chess will face any danger to protect his friends, even if it means confronting what he fears the most.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(160)
★★★★
25%
(67)
★★★
15%
(40)
★★
7%
(19)
-7%
(-19)

Most Helpful Reviews

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It's like Kevin Costner's Water World being told with Roald Dahl's ...

It's like Kevin Costner's Water World being told with Roald Dahl's whimsical language. It's set in the far future, after the earth has been choked by a fog of Nanites (tiny pollution scrubbing machines that took over and started their own factories making more of themselves). Humans had to find higher ground above the fog. Civilization is tiered, with the richest at the top of the mountains and the poorest closest to the fog. Like Water World, everything is constructed out of remnants of the civilization mankind had to be leave behind. And like Roald Dahl, there is a lot of clever use of language. Common phrases and objects from the past (our present) are misinterpreted adding quite a bit of humor for the reader to catch on to.
I was a little bummed it is the first in a series. I am getting "series-ed" out. But since I connected with the the characters I'll definitely read the second to see how it all plays out.
I'm a fifth grade teacher and would even consider this as a read aloud (which is a big honor because we only have time for about 5 books over the year).
3 people found this helpful
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Ok

Ok
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Good book!

Good read!
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Great adventure book

The Fog Diver is such a great book! My son has never willing read, much less finished a book that wasn’t Diary of a Wimpy Kid. He LOVES this book. He’s read it TWICE now and he want to be Chess for Halloween. He had me read it and I have to say, I really enjoyed it. The story is fun and new, honestly I’ll probably reread it as well.
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Three Stars

rather vague
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... Diver to my children all summer long and we loved it. My boys (7 and 10) loved it

I read The fog Diver to my children all summer long and we loved it. My boys (7 and 10) loved it. We fast paced entertaining and how many books start with "My name is Chess and I was born inside a cage" We can't wait for The Lost compass to get out!
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... Diver to my children all summer long and we loved it. My boys (7 and 10) loved it

I read The fog Diver to my children all summer long and we loved it. My boys (7 and 10) loved it. We fast paced entertaining and how many books start with "My name is Chess and I was born inside a cage" We can't wait for The Lost compass to get out!
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Cheesy, brisk, sequel-ready kid’s fantasy tale

I would call this a blend of Harry Potter and Percy Jackson. Chess as a protagonist has a lot in common with Harry: loyal to his friends, has a peculiar distinguishing trait, is desperately sought after by the bad guy. The group dynamics of Chess and his crewmates, especially the way author Joel Ross has them banter, reminds me of Percy Jackson.

Ross has created a fascinating world with a de facto caste system and flying machines, dominated by the Fog. The Fog’s backstory, as well as all the flying around, reminded me of the toxic jungle in Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind.

Aside from an exposition-heavy opening act, the plot moves pretty quickly and there isn't as much examination of the different set pieces as I would like. The kids are basically on the run the whole book, and they make some sketchy decisions that don't make logical sense but serve to take the reader on a quick tour of their known world and move the plot out of the corners Ross writes into.

The finale is underwhelming and ends seemingly once we’ve just gotten started. Clearly a sequel is intended, but Ross didn't even try to wrap up intermediate story lines. Also there were opportunities missed to convey peril and mortal danger that the kids were in, to accurately reflect the dangers of their world. The tone was too jokey and snarky, I felt.

This book is probably too immature for YA and would find a good niche marketed to 10-12 year-olds.
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Bookworm Speaks!-The Fog Diver

Bookworm Speaks!

The Fog Diver

by Joel Ross

****

The Story: Once the Fog started rising, the earth was covered with a deadly white mist until nothing remained but the mountaintops. Now humanity clings to its highest peaks, called the Rooftop, where the wealthy Five Families rule over the lower slopes and floating junkyards.
Thirteen-year-old Chess and his friends Hazel, Bea, and Swedish sail their rickety air raft over the deadly Fog, scavenging the ruins for anything they can sell to survive. But now survival isn't enough. They must risk everything to get to the miraculous city of Port Oro, the only place where their beloved Mrs. E can be cured of fogsickness. Yet the ruthless Lord Kodoc is hot on their trail, for Chess has a precious secret, one that Kodoc is desperate to use against him. Now Chess will face any danger to protect his friends, even if it means confronting what he fears the most.

The Review:

The most memorable aspect of this book is the world that that the author builds. It takes place in the future where air pollution was choking the life out of the world so they tried to use nanotechnology to fix it. Guess what happens next! It gets out of hand and the world is destroyed and the survivors are forced to congregate on mountain tops.

Similar to the Mortal Engines by Phillip Reeve, while this technically is a post-apocalyptic tale, there a great many steampunk elements: Airships, goggles, brass pistons, all that good stuff. Throughout the text we are given references to the technological expertise of the past age and we see that their original functions have passed from memory. The television or teevee is regarded as an altar that the people of the past worshipped. Not too different from today! There is also a reference to iPads but now they are used as decorative objects.

Turn to any news source and one will probably find a story about the latest gadget or the dawn of space-age nano tube technology. That is all well and good but if the end of the world we know were to dawn those things will quickly fall away and it will be back to leather, steel, and gears.

Nothing like the basics.

The passing of time is also ingeniously introduced through the dialogue and slang used by the main characters. Again, similar to the Mortal Engines, present day terms have become muddled and misidentified in the new world. Dairy Queen and Burger King are regarded as religious icons. Spelling Bees and Hello Kitties are regarded as real animals from myth.

Our present day culture is so immersive that one can fall prey to the illusion of perpetuity but history has shown that once the infrastructure breaks down and generations who remember original purposes pass, the once ubiquitous cultural norms break down. While most likely played for laughs, it is a commentary on the transient nature of things and also an interesting way at how quirky the world after the world will be.

As ingenious as the setting is, the story does fall prey to plot elements that can seem very familiar to readers of this genre. The protagonist, Chess, follows many familiar tropes: The orphaned, teenaged protagonist with the special ability that makes him very valuable and pursued by the evil overlords. Sounds quite familiar to any patron of YA fiction.

Aside from the that hiccup, the colorful cast of characters is extremely entertaining and provide the heart of the story. Major Kudos to the author for making the captain of the airship, Hazel, a dark skinned woman. Its probably counterproductive to make such a big deal, but it deserves credit. The other cast of characters is very diverse and provides a lot character.

Swedish is the tough pilot of the ship and serves as the muscle of the crew while in port.

Bea is the young mechanic who is very innocent and loves stories (flawed ones) about the world that came before. Something Bookworm has noticed is how in a lot of fiction, the engineer is always a perky, young girl a’ la Firefly. Bookworm does not see anything wrong with that mind you, but it risks becoming cliched. Writers need to watch out for this.

What also needs to be watched out for is how in some parts the book tends to drag, mostly because the character’s suffer a little too much. They experience a few to many setbacks and it starts to get a little dull, even between the thrilling action scenes. (Very well crafted ones at that). They do a lot of things but seem to make very little headway. Suffering is a critical part of any character development but there’s a fine line between inflicting suffering on your character and making them the living incarnation of Murphy’s Law.

Final Verdict: The Fog Diver is a wonderful book with a novel look at the future and a stunningly crafted setting. What is very satisfying is that while this book will most likely be the first in a series, it ends on a note that wraps things up satisfactory. It does not fall victim to sequel bait, as in ending on cliffhanger. So, if ultimately there is no new book, which Bookworm hopes there is, it was wrapped up nicely.

Four out of Five Stars.

****
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