Review: Sheltered: When a Boy Becomes a Legend by Jacob Paul Patchen

Review: Sheltered: When a Boy Becomes a Legend by Jacob Paul Patchen

Sheltered: When a Boy Becomes a Legend
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Description (from Amazon.com)

With America under attack from within, twelve-year-old James must fight his way to freedom while trying to hold onto his values and virtue.

“We are all given a space in life to fill, a roaring emptiness in time… and it’s how you choose to fill that void, that will determine the difference in becoming a man or a legend.”

That’s what my father said to me a few years ago before he walked out on Mom, Emily, and me. If I would have had any sense back then, I would have asked him exactly what that meant.

Instead, I’m out here learning it the hard way – dodging bullets and bombs while America is at war – my friends fighting back with all we have, while trying to keep these orphaned children safe and our dreams alive.

They call us The Risers. Well, okay… so we call ourselves “The Risers.” But either way, we’re out here doing everything we can just to survive and rise up from our nation’s ashes with honor, integrity, and justice.

Now, with smoky memories of a lost childhood, and the horrible, lingering, cardboard taste of MRE crackers (still left over from living in Dad’s bomb shelter), my mini army and me march forward, taking back what was once taken for granted.

But to be honest, I’m really just out here winging it. Wish me luck.


4.5 Stars

My Thoughts

When I was a wee bit younger, I recall watching a two-day miniseries event call “The Day After.” Many of you may remember the furor caused by the teleplay, but what I recall most was the feeling I got after watching it when I wondered if my twelve-year-old self could handle such an attack.

Sheltered: When a Boy Becomes a Legend by Jacob Paul Patchen brought me back to those days. It helped that the protagonist was a twelve-year-old boy himself who was thrust into “Red Dawn” situation. The plot is relatively straightforward in this short YA dystopian book: America is attacked and the children form a group called “The Risers” to both survive and fight back.

Patchen does a great job putting me in the mindset of a twelve-year-old, to include language, specific points of view, and the emotions felt when his father walked out on the family. The boy is tough but sensitive, and I can see that a great deal of effort was put into his character development. Unfortunately, I was not engaged as much with the older sister or some of the side characters. Nevertheless, the writing and POV of James brought me back to those days wondering what if.

I would recommend this book to the target audience: YA readers in the range of 12 to 15, but I would also say those who are old enough to remember the fear we all felt in our childhood growing up under the threat of war might find this book pulling on a few strings. That’s what makes a book good, and Sheltered: When a Boy Becomes a Legend by Jacob Paul Patchen is a good example of how to pull that off.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08V8D282P/


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