WARP, Book 2: The Hangman's Revolution

by Eoin Colfer

Hardcover, 2014

Status

Available

Call number

823.92

Publication

Puffin (2014), 368 pages

Description

FBI agent Chevie Savano escapes into the past to elude the secret police after they kill Charles Smart just as he is telling her of the WARP program, and she and Riley team up to find Colonel Clayton Box before he can launch missles at the capitals of Europe.

User reviews

LibraryThing member readernoir
Pros:

The Hangman’s Revolution, I think, may have potential appeal with some readers. First and foremost, great references to pop culture (from Sauron to the Thundercats) and entertaining situations make for a fairly light read. Colfer’s writing style is suffused with a dry, casual wit that’s
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amusing, and a large departure stylistically from the Artemis Fowl series.

There are a couple of good characters here. Chevie, our main protagonist, is admirable in her morality and toughness, and she can, on occasion, be amusing as well. It’s great to have a main character that is from an ethnic minority (she’s Shawnee Native American) that is proud of her heritage but is not defined by it. Oft-undermined Clayton Box is also interesting. He’s a classic psychopath who’s been encouraged to behave violently from a young age and uses religion as a tool to oppress and terrorize. Fourteen-year-old martial artist-cum-magician Riley is hands-down my favorite character: he’s clever, kind-hearted, and very, very funny.

Cons:

I found the plot recap from the first book confusing. Far from catching up anyone who has not read the first book, it’s likely to confuse even readers who have. Also, the plotting here is dodgy at best. The initial chapters are boring, and the alternating points-of-view (Riley in Victorian London and Chevie in present-day London) lack cohesion in a way that’s more than physical. Their storylines feel disparate, and you can never quite know where the story is going. By the finale, the plot has lost so much steam that it was genuinely difficult for me to read. Obviously, this made for a very unsatisfying ending.

The omniscient narration is jarring and unnecessary, particularly because it’s repeatedly used to follow uninteresting characters. I also felt that the writing lacked emotional resonance. It was more like the author was going through the motions rather than trying to earnestly depict human emotion. This was a real hindrance at times as it pulled me out of the story.

While I do understand that this book is a large extent a satire, it’s still true that the main characters (notably Box) are far too frequently undermined to be taken seriously. The commentary about use of religion to justify violence may be apt and timely, but doesn’t gain much traction as it’s poorly-developed and executed. Finally, the rampant use of violence feels gratuitous and again, undermines the story.

Verdict:

It may succeed with less discerning readers within its target demographic, but the Hangman’s Revolution’s sloppy plotting and lack of cohesion means that it’s unlikely to win over anyone else.
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LibraryThing member tjsjohanna
I'll admit I was disappointed at the beginning of this book to find that what had appeared to be a satisfying resolution at the end of book one had become a disappointing muddle in book two. Fortunately Riley and Cheyenne are reunited and their team work is as fun to read the second time around.
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Their efforts to foil an evil plot by criminals from the future is full of last minute twists and turns.
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LibraryThing member lkmuir
FBI agent Chevie Savano escapes into the past to elude the secret police after they kill Charles Smart just as he is telling her of the WARP program, and she and Riley team up to find Colonel Clayton Box before he can launch missles at the capitals of Europe.
LibraryThing member DLMorrese
Despite some eye-rolling improbabilities, this is a fun, well-written YA adventure. The two teenage protagonists from the last book are reunited once again in Victorian London, where they have to change the past...or prevent a psychopath from changing the past...or preserve the future that should
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have happened.... Time travel stories can be so confusing. In any case, the villains in this one are scary because they are almost believable.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2014-06-24

Physical description

368 p.; 6.38 inches

ISBN

0141341793 / 9780141341798

Local notes

FBI Agent Chavie Savano is trapped in a nightmare future. Unless she can return to 19th-century London and change the course of history, millions will die. Luckily she has Riley the boy magician and a Victorian gangster with lovely hair to help her battle two crazed villains, who have brought the military technology of the future back in time - with potentially disastrous consequences.

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