Told through the journal entries of 16-year-old Miranda, a high school sophomore in Pennsylvania, Life As We Knew It describes how Miranda and her family deal with the devastating climactic and social changes that occur after a large astroid hits the Moon, knocking it into a new orbit much closer to the Earth.
The ensuing tsunamis that destroy coastal cities around the world aren’t immediately felt by Miranda’s family, so their way of life is not hugely affected in the first couple of months following the asteroid collision. In fact, Miranda’s mother even sends her younger son to baseball camp for the summer. But in time Miranda, her two brothers, and her mother begin to experience the loss of things that they used to take for granted.
The Internet goes down, and then stays down. Gasoline prices skyrocket, and eventually it becomes unavailable to anyone who can’t afford black market prices. Electrical service is spotty and stays off for days at a time. Water service shuts down, and water wells dry up. People who did not stockpile food when grocery stores were still open slowly starve. As the novel goes one, things get even worse.
This could’ve been an utterly depressing novel, but Miranda’s appealing character makes it a thrilling read instead. She’s resourceful, vulnerable, optimistic, realistic, generous, and selfish, as most teenagers are. She’s a surviver. No wonder Sarina liked it so much. (It’s great when your kid is old enough to recommend books to you!)
Pfeffer has two other books in the “Last Survivors” series: The Dead and the Gone and This World We Live In.