DuPrau, Jeanne. 2003. The City of Ember. New York: Random House.
Summary
The City of Ember is the story of people in a city that is located underground. Only they do not know they are underground. Over 200 years ago a group of experts decided to send a group of people, consisting of adults over sixty and babies, to live in a city underground. They did this to help ensure that people would not be eliminated from Earth. The first mayor of the Ember is given a box that held the instructions for how to leave the city. The box has a time lock on it and will open when the experts have thought that it would be safe. The box is supposed to be passed down from mayor to mayor. The seventh mayor of the city decides to take the box home and try to open it. He does not get it open and dies before he can pass it on to his successor. The box stays in the closest, it opens on its own and nobody knows it. Lena is the granddaughter of the seventh mayor. One day Lena finds an old cryptic looking piece of paper. Her baby sister, Poppy, has torn it up so she cannot read the entire message. She shows it to her friend Doon. Doon has been trying to figure out a way to fix the generator. The generator is what keeps the lights of Ember running. It is starting to fail and the lights have started to flicker and even have had small blackouts. Along with the problems with the lights the city is running out of food and supplies. Lena and Doon decide that the paper Lena found must be instructions out of the city. They work together to decipher the message. They finally figure it out and take Poppy and leave the city. At the time they leave they are wanted by the police, by order of the mayor, because they have been telling people how the mayor has been hoarding supplies for his own use. The way out is through the river, they make it out and discover a world they have never known. While exploring their new world and looking for another way into Ember they come across a tunnel at the top of a hill. They walk through the tunnel until they come to a sudden drop. At the bottom of the drop off they see the lights of their city, Ember. They write a note and throw it down to their city.
Analysis
Lena and Doon are the central characters in the book. DuPrau develops Lena as a character that is mature for her age and is a nurturer. She does this by having Lena care for grandmother and baby sister after her parents pass away. She is now the only one in the family that works. She also makes the decision to have their neighbor, Mrs. Muldor, come stay during the day when she feels that her grandmother is not well enough to watch Poppy by herself anymore. You see Lena's nurturing side too when she will not leave the city with out Poppy. Even though it is dangerous she goes back to get her because she can't leave her by herself.
Doon's character is portrayed as a bit more dark and more rough around the edges. You also understand that he wants to do something great, something his father will be proud of. He has daydreams about standing on the steps of town hall and telling everyone he has fixed the generator or found a way out of the city. He pictures his dad being so proud. This is one reason why he wanted to work in the Pipeworks. He thought it would be a way to do something great that everyone would remember.
The idea of a city underground where there is only one way out is a great idea for a story. The fact that the instructions and supplies were left makes the builders have a human quality. They did not just send people below the ground with now way to get out or a way to survive. When the instructions are lost it helps to add to the suspense of the story. You wonder how the people will survive and if they will find the way out. I like the fact that the people that finally do discover the way out are what we would considered children. In Ember however children graduate from school and start work at the age of twelve. I think this is an interesting idea to have students think about.
The book is set in a made up city in the bottom of a mountain. The fact that this can probably never actually happen makes the city even more interesting. DuPrau does a good job of explaining the light and darkness of the city. She tells how the lights are turned out at the same time every night and how the lights are starting to flicker. You can feel the fear and anxiousness when the blackouts occur. I like how at the end of the story Lena and Doon are able to see their city at the bottom of the hole. It helps to reinforce how far underground the city was. DuPrau does a great job of having Lena and Doon describes the new world that they found. She describes the way they experience their first sunrise and how they are fascinated by different animals.
The theme that I get through this book is survival. Lena and Doon feel that the city is falling apart. The blackouts are coming more frequently and food and supplies are running out. No one has come out and said how bad things are but they just have a feeling. Even when they are wanted by the police they still hold true to the thought that they can get out. They do everything in their power to figure out the instructions and find the way out of Ember. All the odds seem against them but they still manage to succeed.
DuPrau presents the story of Ember in a clear and precise way. The book starts off with the explanation of the instruction. This gives you an insight of what is to come. She explains at the end of the book how the the city of Ember came to be. She answers a lot of questions by doing this. I like the fact that she had the explanation come from one of the original occupants of Ember. It makes the experience more personal.
Review ExcerptsHorn Book Magazine review - "The writing and storytelling are agreeably spare and remarkably suspenseful, and rather than bogging down in explanations of how Ember came to be and how it functions, DuPrau allows the events of the story to convey the necessary information."
School Library Journal review - "The setting may not be so ingeniously envisioned as those of, say, Joan Aiken's Is Underground (Turtleback, 1995) and Lois Lowry's The Giver (Houghton, 1993), but the quick pace and the uncomplicated characters and situations will keep voracious fans of the genre engaged."
Connections
This book would be a great way for students to get creative and stretch their imagination. I would like to have my students think of their own "society" or city and how it came about. I would live for them to tell how and why the city was created, the rules and laws and how day to day things happen in the city. The Giver would be another good book to incorporate in this lesson also.