Life As We Knew It
(Libby/OverDrive eAudiobook)

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Books on Tape , 2006.
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Available from Libby/OverDrive

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Description

New York Times bestseller! A heart-stopping post-apocalyptic thriller that's "absorbing from first to last page."*

When a meteor knocks the moon closer to earth, Miranda, a high school sophomore, takes shelter with her family.

Told in a year’s worth of journal entries, Life as We Knew It chronicles the human struggle to hold on to the most important resource of all—hope—in an increasingly desperate and unfamiliar world.

As August turns dark and wintery in northeastern Pennsylvania, Miranda, her two brothers, and their mother retreat to the unexpected safe haven of their sunroom, where they subsist on stockpiled food and limited water in the warmth of a wood-burning stove.

I guess I always felt even if the world came to an end, McDonald’s still would be open. Like one marble hitting another, when the moon slams closer to earth, the result is catastrophic. Worldwide tsunamis wipe out the coasts, earthquakes rock the continents, and volcanic ash blocks out the sun.

Life as We Know It is an extraordinary series debut. The companion novels are: The Dead and the Gone, This World We Live In, and The Shade of the Moon.

(*Publishers Weekly, starred review)

More Details

Format
eAudiobook
Edition
Unabridged
Street Date
11/21/2006
Language
English
ISBN
9780739348109

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Also in this Series

  • Life as we knew it (Life as we knew it Volume 1) Cover
  • The dead and the gone (Life as we knew it Volume 2) Cover
  • This world we live in (Life as we knew it Volume 3) Cover
  • The shade of the moon (Life as we knew it Volume 4) Cover

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Both of these gritty, bleak series dealing with survival involve teens whose lives turn upside down overnight due to events out of their control: an asteroid that hits the moon, in one, and a sudden invasion in the other. -- Kathy Stewart
Readers who enjoy science fiction stories about epic natural disasters and crave bleak, richly detailed worlds will enjoy these series, which follow characters attempting to survive against ever-worsening odds in a newly post-apocalyptic society. -- Alina Gerall
While Life As We Knew It is told through journal entries and Overthrow is from multiple points of view, both series tackle the topic of survival in a not-far-off future filled with ecological disasters and offer thoughtful commentary on the world today. -- Sarah Bean Thompson
Both of these bleak, suspenseful series are set just after apocalyptic natural disasters and follow groups of teens struggling to survive in suddenly desolate worlds. -- Alina Gerall
These series have the themes "pandemic apocalypse" and "band of survivors"; the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "survival," and "teenagers."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "survival," and "teenagers."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the theme "climate change apocalypse"; the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "survival," and "teenagers."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "natural disasters," and "teenagers."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "survival," and "teenagers."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the theme "pandemic apocalypse"; the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "survival," and "post-apocalypse."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "natural disasters," and "teenagers."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the theme "climate change apocalypse"; the genre "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "teenagers," and "post-apocalypse."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "survival," and "teenagers."
These series have the appeal factors bleak and gritty, and they have the themes "pandemic apocalypse" and "band of survivors"; the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "teenagers," "post-apocalypse," and "survival (after epidemics)."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, and they have the theme "pandemic apocalypse"; the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "survival," and "teenagers."
These series have the appeal factors bleak, emotionally intense, and moving, and they have the theme "pandemic apocalypse"; the genres "science fiction" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "post-apocalypse," "survival (after epidemics)," and "dystopias."

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the themes "climate change apocalypse" and "band of survivors"; the genre "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "life change events," and "natural disasters."
In these suspenseful stories, teens have their lives turned upside down by apocalyptic events far beyond their control -- and must figure out how to survive in their new, very different worlds. -- Ellen Foreman
In a world devastated by violent environmental disasters, the teens in these bleak stories of survival rely on family and friends to endure the chaos of societies trying to cope with utter destruction. -- Sarah Stanley
After the snow - Crockett, S. D.
A strong sense of place frames each story of resilient teens who struggle to survive in a world made brutal because of environmental disaster. Both intense science fiction stories are bleak and thought-provoking. -- Tom Reynolds
While Life as We Knew It doesn't contain the physical action and violence of Enclave, both are compelling and chilling survival stories set in a post-apocalyptic world. -- Jennifer Stubben Hatch
Life suddenly changes and society begins to collapse in these apocalyptic stories that draw readers into a world that seems all too possible. While the catastrophic event in the Rule is unknown, the effect of the moon's repositioning is frighteningly clear in Life. -- Beth Gerall
Daily life continues (with increasing disruptions) in the wake of devastating natural disasters in these bleak, chilling science fiction novels. The adolescent girl protagonists' unease increases as civilization unravels and baffled experts fail to explain what will become of humanity. -- Kathy Stewart
NoveList recommends "Overthrow" for fans of "Life as we knew it". Check out the first book in the series.
Catastrophe looms as an asteroid speeds towards the Earth (Looked Up) and another towards the moon (Life) in these poignant novels. Individual stories of teens pondering the value of life are emphasized over the details of world-wide destruction in both. -- Diane Colson
These books have the appeal factors emotionally intense, moving, and atmospheric, and they have the themes "climate change apocalypse," "band of survivors," and "pandemic apocalypse"; the genre "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "sixteen-year-old girls," and "survival."
These books have the theme "climate change apocalypse"; the genre "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," "teenagers," and "families."
Both of these bleak yet ultimately hopeful dystopias feature a strong sense of place with sturdy, teenaged narrators who struggle for emotional connections with family and friends amid day-to-day survival. While Life is fast-paced, Safekeeping is placid. -- Julie Corsaro

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Susan Beth Pfeffer and Emmy Laybourne write bleak, fast-paced apocalyptic series about teens trying to survive in a world changed forever by environmental catastrophe. The catalyst for horrific climate change in Pfeffer's books is a meteor hitting the moon while a volcanic eruption triggers natural disasters in Laybourne's suspenseful stories. -- Tom Reynolds
These authors' works have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subjects "girls," "sixteen-year-old girls," and "teenagers."
These authors' works have the appeal factors emotionally intense, and they have the genre "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "natural disasters" and "post-apocalypse."
These authors' works have the appeal factors emotionally intense, bleak, and haunting, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subjects "girls," "sixteen-year-old girls," and "teenagers."
These authors' works have the appeal factors emotionally intense, and they have the subjects "sisters," "sixteen-year-old girls," and "teenage romance."
These authors' works have the subjects "sixteen-year-old girls," "survival (after environmental catastrophe)," and "natural disasters."
These authors' works have the subjects "siblings," "single-parent families," and "eleven-year-old girls."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

A meteor is going to hit the moon, and 16-year-old Miranda, like the rest of her family and neighbors in rural Pennsylvania, intends to watch it from the comfort of a lawn chair in her yard. But the event is not the benign impact predicted. The moon is knocked closer to Earth, setting off a chain of horrific occurrences: tsunamis, earthquakes, and, later, volcanic eruptions that disrupt life across the planet. Written in the form of Miranda's diary, this disquieting and involving story depicts one family's struggle to survive in a world where food, warmth, and well-being disappear in the blink of an eye. As life goes from bad to worse, Miranda struggles to find a way to survive both mentally and physically, discovering strength in her family members and herself. This novel will inevitably be compared to Meg Rosoff's Printz Award Book, How I Live Now (2004). Pfeffer doesn't write with Rosoff's startling eloquence, and her setup is not as smooth (Why don't scientists predict the possibility of this outcome?). But Miranda and her family are much more familiar than Rosoff's characters, and readers will respond to the authenticity and immediacy of their plight. Each page is filled with events both wearying and terrifying and infused with honest emotions. Pfeffer brings cataclysmic tragedy very close. --Ilene Cooper Copyright 2006 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

When an asteroid collides with the moon, causing natural disasters tidal waves, volcanoes, earthquakes and climate changes on Earth, life as 16-year-old Miranda knows it will never be the same. Suddenly, things she has taken for granted electricity, news from the outside world and three square meals a day are a thing of the past. Thanks to her mother's foresight and preparedness, Miranda and her two brothers are better off than many families in their Pennsylvania community. They have a pantry filled with canned goods and plenty of logs to fuel their wood-burning stove. Yet their situation becomes more critical as other unexpected disasters arise. The book may be lengthy, but most readers will find it absorbing from first page to last. This survival tale by the author of The Year Without Michael celebrates the fortitude and resourcefulness of human beings during critical times. The story unfolds through Miranda's journal entries, from May, when the asteroid strikes, to the following March. Though the entries paint a grim picture of a rapidly shrinking civilization ("I write stuff down in here and I don't read it. Things are bad enough without having to remind myself of just how bad things are," she explains), her words also evoke a strain of hope which proves to be her most essential survival tool. Miranda's changing priorities, undying love for her family and heightened appreciation of simple pleasures will likely provoke discussion and inspire gratitude for life as we know it now. Ages 12-up. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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School Library Journal Review

Gr 6-8-Pfeffer tones down the terror, but otherwise crafts a frighteningly plausible account of the local effects of a near-future worldwide catastrophe. The prospect of an asteroid hitting the Moon is just a mildly interesting news item to Pennsylvania teenager Miranda, for whom a date for the prom and the personality changes in her born-again friend, Megan, are more immediate concerns. Her priorities undergo a radical change, however, when that collision shifts the Moon into a closer orbit, causing violent earthquakes, massive tsunamis, millions of deaths, and an upsurge in volcanism. Thanks to frantic preparations by her quick-thinking mother, Miranda's family is in better shape than many as utilities and public services break down in stages, wild storms bring extremes of temperature, and outbreaks of disease turn the hospital into a dead zone. In Miranda's day-by-day journal entries, however, Pfeffer keeps nearly all of the death and explicit violence offstage, focusing instead on the stresses of spending months huddled in increasingly confined quarters, watching supplies dwindle, and wondering whether there will be any future to make the effort worthwhile. The author provides a glimmer of hope at the end, but readers will still be left stunned and thoughtful.-John Peters, New York Public Library (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Horn Book Review

(Middle School, High School) ""It was still our moon and it was still just a big dead rock in the sky, but it wasn't benign anymore,"" sixteen-year-old Miranda writes in her journal after an asteroid hits the moon and knocks it closer toward Earth. The immediate result of this event is global devastation in the form of tsunamis, earthquakes, volcanoes, and other cataclysmic natural disasters. But Pfeffer's taut survival story is effective not because it witnesses these catastrophes firsthand but because it doesn't. Miranda, her mother, and two brothers live in Pennsylvania, away from the coasts, where the initial number of casualties is rumored (all cable TV, Internet, and cell-phone service has been knocked out) to be almost unthinkable. Miranda's journal entries provide a riveting account of how lack of information, resources, and, subsequently, hope for the future shrink her world. ""We're dyingin increments,"" she tells her older brother as their stockpile of food and water diminishes and ash from distant erupting volcanoes blocks the sun, producing wintry temperatures in August. Against mounting dismal conditions, the family's drawing together to survive and find meaning in their altered lives is all the more triumphant and makes the eventual small signs that conditions will improve all the sweeter. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Sixteen-year-old Miranda begins a daily ten-month diary documenting the survival ordeal her rural Pennsylvania family endures when a large meteor's collision with the moon brings on destruction of the modern world and all its technological conveniences. The change in the moon's gravitational pull begins to cause natural havoc around the globe in the form of catastrophic tsunamis, earthquakes, volcanoes and other weather-related disasters. Miranda's American teen view gradually alters as personal security, physical strength and health become priorities. Pfeffer paints a gruesome and often depressing drama as conditions become increasingly difficult and dangerous with the dwindling of public and private services. Miranda's daily litany of cutting firewood, rationing canned meals, short tempers flaring in a one-room confinement is offset by lots of heart-to-heart talks about life and its true significance with her mother, older brother and religiously devout best friend. Death is a constant threat, and Pfeffer instills despair right to the end but is cognizant to provide a ray of hope with a promising conclusion. Plausible science fiction with a frighteningly realistic reminder of recent tragedies here and abroad. (Fiction. YA) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

/*Starred Review*/ A meteor is going to hit the moon, and 16-year-old Miranda, like the rest of her family and neighbors in rural Pennsylvania, intends to watch it from the comfort of a lawn chair in her yard. But the event is not the benign impact predicted. The moon is knocked closer to Earth, setting off a chain of horrific occurrences: tsunamis, earthquakes, and, later, volcanic eruptions that disrupt life across the planet. Written in the form of Miranda's diary, this disquieting and involving story depicts one family's struggle to survive in a world where food, warmth, and well-being disappear in the blink of an eye. As life goes from bad to worse, Miranda struggles to find a way to survive both mentally and physically, discovering strength in her family members and herself. This novel will inevitably be compared to Meg Rosoff's Printz Award Book, How I Live Now (2004). Pfeffer doesn't write with Rosoff's startling eloquence, and her setup is not as smooth (Why don't scientists predict the possibility of this outcome?). But Miranda and her family are much more familiar than Rosoff's characters, and readers will respond to the authenticity and immediacy of their plight. Each page is filled with events both wearying and terrifying and infused with honest emotions. Pfeffer brings cataclysmic tragedy very close. ((Reviewed September 1, 2006)) Copyright 2006 Booklist Reviews

Copyright 2006 Booklist Reviews
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

When an asteroid collides with the moon, causing natural disasters—tidal waves, volcanoes, earthquakes and climate changes—on Earth, life as 16-year-old Miranda knows it will never be the same. Suddenly, things she has taken for granted—electricity, news from the outside world and three square meals a day—are a thing of the past. Thanks to her mother's foresight and preparedness, Miranda and her two brothers are better off than many families in their Pennsylvania community. They have a pantry filled with canned goods and plenty of logs to fuel their wood-burning stove. Yet their situation becomes more critical as other unexpected disasters arise. The book may be lengthy, but most readers will find it absorbing from first page to last. This survival tale by the author of The Year Without Michael celebrates the fortitude and resourcefulness of human beings during critical times. The story unfolds through Miranda's journal entries, from May, when the asteroid strikes, to the following March. Though the entries paint a grim picture of a rapidly shrinking civilization ("I write stuff down in here and I don't read it. Things are bad enough without having to remind myself of just how bad things are," she explains), her words also evoke a strain of hope which proves to be her most essential survival tool. Miranda's changing priorities, undying love for her family and heightened appreciation of simple pleasures will likely provoke discussion and inspire gratitude for life as we know it now. Ages 12-up. (Oct.)

[Page 53]. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
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School Library Journal Reviews

Gr 6-8 Pfeffer tones down the terror, but otherwise crafts a frighteningly plausible account of the local effects of a near-future worldwide catastrophe. The prospect of an asteroid hitting the Moon is just a mildly interesting news item to Pennsylvania teenager Miranda, for whom a date for the prom and the personality changes in her born-again friend, Megan, are more immediate concerns. Her priorities undergo a radical change, however, when that collision shifts the Moon into a closer orbit, causing violent earthquakes, massive tsunamis, millions of deaths, and an upsurge in volcanism. Thanks to frantic preparations by her quick-thinking mother, Miranda's family is in better shape than many as utilities and public services break down in stages, wild storms bring extremes of temperature, and outbreaks of disease turn the hospital into a dead zone. In Miranda's day-by-day journal entries, however, Pfeffer keeps nearly all of the death and explicit violence offstage, focusing instead on the stresses of spending months huddled in increasingly confined quarters, watching supplies dwindle, and wondering whether there will be any future to make the effort worthwhile. The author provides a glimmer of hope at the end, but readers will still be left stunned and thoughtful.John Peters, New York Public Library

[Page 166]. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Pfeffer, S. B., & Bauer, E. (2006). Life As We Knew It (Unabridged). Books on Tape.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Pfeffer, Susan Beth and Emily Bauer. 2006. Life As We Knew It. Books on Tape.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Pfeffer, Susan Beth and Emily Bauer. Life As We Knew It Books on Tape, 2006.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Pfeffer, S. B. and Bauer, E. (2006). Life as we knew it. Unabridged Books on Tape.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Pfeffer, Susan Beth, and Emily Bauer. Life As We Knew It Unabridged, Books on Tape, 2006.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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