littleread1
Written on Jan 5, 2015
The story starts off introducing us to the Given family. They experience an unexplained event that they try to forget, and are mostly successful. Jump forward to the sisters as adults and suddenly shit really hits the fan. While there is a large focus on the Given sisters, I hesitate to say they are the main characters. There is a group of six, referred to as The Silvers (See? the title comes into play!) that the whole story revolves around. I would almost say the reader is an invisible seventh character in the story, as the narrative takes you on a journey with Amanda, Hannah, Mia, Theo, Zack, and David. You may see things they don't notice as important, but you learn about the new world they are thrust into as they do. It can be fascinatingly frustrating at times, but that frustration gives you a deeper connection to The Silvers that you would not have had otherwise.
Something I feel like I have to address - yes the book is Sci Fi. Which means there is some "science" explained as the world is. However, there is not on large info dump. And not all the characters are traditionally "smart" in the sense of book smarts. So as long as you pay attention and learn the lingo you will be able to "keep walking" along with the characters just fine.
Something that was a wonderful surprise for me as a character driven reader was the complexity of the bad guys. I use that term loosely, because as you go along, you will develop an certain empathy, and maybe even understand their motives. At least some of them. At this point I am still unsure who exactly is a bad guy and who is a good guy. But rather than frustrate me, it is wonderful. I usually like knowing what's what, but the way this story is told I am actually more than ok with being somewhat in the dark.
I don't really know what to say to convince you to give THE FLIGHT OF THE SILVERS a try. You should just try it. today. While obviously not EVERYTHING is resolved in book one (there would be no reason for a book two if that was the case!) there is enough resolution that the wait for book two will be tolerable. But just barely.