This book was amazing. I’m not saying it’s all pretty and sparkly or anything. It’s nothing like that. “The Reality Bug” by D. J. MacHale is by no means a little picture book for five-year-olds with unicorns and fairies and all that mushy stuff. It is, instead, a true masterpiece describing an entirely captivating, totally awesome, off-the-charts suspenseful and dramatic adventure. It is a mature book, though, so please don’t use it as a read-aloud to share with your preschooler sibling over winter break. There is some serious stuff in it, including blood and death and gore. Luckily, D. J. MacHale doesn’t go over the top with all of that stuff. He goes just to the point where it gives the book an action-filled plot, and not past that into the realm of sickening, graphic descriptions of battles and blood. That is one of the reasons why I like this book.
At this point, you are probably not very sure what the point is of you reading this review. All I’ve done so far in this review is ramble on about the blood and gore described in “The Reality Bug” even though you don’t even know what the heck this book is even about. That is what I am going to tell you. “The Reality Bug” is a book that follows the adventures of three courageous people: Bobby Pendragon, Mark Dimond, and Courtney Chetwynde. Bobby’s adventures are generally the most interesting. They contain most of the action that takes place in the book. This is because Bobby is a Traveler. He is a person who can travel through time and space with the aid of special wormholes called flumes. The flumes can transport him to any of the ten worlds (in the book, they are called territories) that exist millions of light years apart and millions of years before or after one another. The journey between territories in a flume only takes a few minutes, though.
Each territory has only one Traveler, destined to fight in the battle against an evil demon traveler named Saint Dane. Saint Dane wants to control Halla, and it is the Travelers’ job to stop him from doing so. If you want to know what Halla is, I will tell you. Very simply, Halla is everything. Every time, every place, every living being that ever existed are part of Halla. Saint Dane’s mission is to throw all of Halla into chaos, the results of which you probably now know would be devastating.
Each of the books in the Pendragon series describes a battle between Saint Dane and the Travelers. The “Reality Bug” is no different. It takes place on a territory called Veelox. The people on Veelox had discovered how to put themselves into a virtual reality world that they could customize however they wanted. All of the people got addicted to their own virtual worlds, called Lifelight. They rejected reality and retreated into their computer worlds, which many people stayed in for years. Saint Dane, trying to push Veelox into chaos, encouraged people to do this.
Bobby’s adventures are all about him, Loor (the Traveler from a territory called Zadaa), and Aja Killian (the Traveler from Veelox) battling Saint Dane to try and bring the people of Veelox out of their Lifelight fantasies. They did this by putting a computer virus called The Reality Bug into the supercomputer that runs Lifelight. The Reality Bug took away some of the perfection in Lifelight that people sought for in Lifelight that was nonexistent in the real world. For example, someone might have been skiing really fast down a mountain dodging trees in his or her fantasy. When the Reality Bug got put into that fantasy, the skier might have plowed straight into a tree and gotten a concussion, which would have happened in real life. When that happened, the hope was that Lifelight would lose its appeal for people. In case you are going to read this book, I will not tell you the outcome of the struggle on Veelox. You will have to read the book to find out.
Now, I will tell you about Mark and Courtney. Mark and Courtney are basically normal people compared to Bobby. They don’t fly off in flumes to battle demons and save the universe from destruction. They live in a normal town called Stony Brook, Connecticut. They go to a normal high school. They live practically normal lives, except for one thing. Bobby. Each Traveler has journals that they write to their best friend back on whatever territory they are from. The Traveler has a special ring, and so does his or her friend. The rings are like miniature flumes, and you can send journals through them. His or her friend(s) safe keeps the journals for their traveler friend, because if any given Traveler dies, his journals are the only description of what he has gone through in his life. Mark and Courtney are the people that Bobby writes his journals to. They keep them in a safe-deposit box at The Stony Brook National Bank.
Mark and Courtney aren’t just Bobby’s librarians, though. They are also his acolytes. An acolyte is the person/people who know the Traveler from their territory and keep that Traveler’s journals safe. An acolyte’s job is to tend to the flume and prepare it for when any Travelers might need to use it. That means that they have to leave clothing from their territory at the flume for Travelers to wear, along with any gear that is required on that territory. “The Reality Bug” also tells the story of the adventure Mark and Courtney go through to become acolytes.
Mark and Courtney were very eager to help Bobby in the battle against Saint Dane. I know that I would, too. If one of my best friends were off in an opposite dimension risking life and limb to save the universe, I would want to help, too. Reading about the Traveler’s terrible plight and not being able to do anything to help tortured Mark and Courtney very much. They found it impossible to focus on their own lives while the universe could have toppled into chaos at any moment. Because of that, when they had the opportunity to become acolytes and actually be a part of the battle for Halla, they were thrilled and accepted it right away. Besides, Mark and Courtney were nearly insane at the point at which they became acolytes. For all they knew, Bobby could have been dead without them knowing, because the territories exist in different time periods. As acolytes, they would be able to prevent injury and death from coming to their friend and his fellow travelers.
The entire book was really good, so it is really hard for me to choose a specific part that was really good. “The Reality Bug” was not a sort of book where there was one specific place that stood out from the rest. Instead of having most of the book build up to one big climax, this book was constant action. That was good and bad. It was good because you never felt like the book was boring, but it was bad because it was impossible to ever put the book down. When I was reading the book before bed, I ended up reading half an hour too long and becoming sleep-deprived. The end of every chapter—every page, even—was a huge cliffhanger in “The Reality Bug.” D. J. MacHale is a very talented author, because it must be extremely hard to keep coming up with super-exciting things to put in every single chapter.
When I had to choose one part from “The Reality Bug” that I liked the most, I didn’t choose it because of how much action there was in it. From what I said in the last paragraph, you probably realize would be an extremely difficult task. Instead, I chose my favorite part from how much importance it had in the book. In “The Reality Bug,” the parts with the most action were not necessarily the ones that you would remember. Since the entire book was filled with action, the very active parts basically are the entire book. The real plot-changing parts, though, still stand out from the rest. When you read a book, you don’t remember the scene when the main character runs a grueling marathon as much as the part where he is sitting after the marathon and contemplating what he had done, because that moment of contemplation was a big landmark in the character’s life. Perhaps he had been unsure of his capabilities before running the marathon, but afterward, he gained tons of confidence in himself. Then, maybe that confidence was just what he needed to go on some expedition that was the climax of the book. Even though the moment where he thinks about his capabilities did not have much action, it was a point where the plot took a major turn. That is why you would remember it more than the marathon.
With this in mind, I picked my favorite part of the book. I selected a part that did not have much action, but still helped determine the outcome of the book. My favorite part of the book was when the first person died from the Reality Bug. Yes, in real life, a person dying would be considered something with a lot of action involved. Compared to everything else that happens in “The Reality Bug,” it is not high on the action scale. It is my favorite part because of the significance it has in the storyline of the book. When Aja Killian and Bobby rushed into the man’s room and see his gaunt, pale, and totally dead face staring back at them, they realized for the first time the damage that their computer virus had brought upon Veelox and its people. Beforehand, they had known that the virus could have bad implications, but then it was still just a theory. Seeing it in reality with an actual person dead really brought a new light to their situation. Aja and Bobby realized that if they did not do anything, the entire territory of Veelox would be doomed to a terrible fate, considering that most of Veelox’s population was in Lifelight. Being in Lifelight at that time meant that you would almost surely die.
Facing these facts was especially bad for Aja. She was the senior phader of Lifelight. A phader is a person who monitors all of the jumps to make sure something doesn’t go wrong. The senior phader’s job is to coordinate all of the phaders and the jumps. Aja knew that it was her responsibility to make sure that people stayed safe in Lifelight. She thought that she had failed. Not only had she failed to make sure that the people stayed safe in their jumps, she had also been the person who had made their situation unsafe in the first place. Before the Reality Bug had corrupted Lifelight, Aja had been arrogant. Once Lifelight got messed up, though, she was humbled and realized that she was not perfect. Knowing that, she worked harder to respect other people and cooperate with them. That was very important, because all the Travelers had to work together to defeat Saint Dane and the Reality Bug.
I researched several sources, but I could not find a reason for why D. J. Machale wrote this book. Because of this, I am forced to make a logical assumption for why he wrote the book. I know that D. J. MacHale was born in Connecticut. I think that the author probably made the story take place in a setting similar to the one where he grew up. If I were the author, I would have had a little fun with writing and made up an awesome story out of my own personal background. I think that the town of Stony Brook would be a lot like the town where D. J. MacHale grew up. That is why I think the author wrote this book.
I connected with how the book was centered on computers. It seemed like the book went into a lot of detail about computers and how awesome they are. I also really like computers and I am very fascinated by them. The book described the computers like they were almost one of the main characters in the book. The computers that run Lifelight play as big of a part in defeating the Reality Bug as any of the human characters. I think that by making the plot like that, the author was trying to say how important computers are by focusing on them so much. If that is what the author is trying to say through the book, I completely agree with him. Sometimes we don’t realize how big of a part computers play in our lives. When they are taken away or corrupted, like in “The Reality Bug,” it can impact our lives in huge ways. That is how I connected to the book.
What I learned from this book was an important life lesson. I learned that even the most perfect and amazing things are flawed. Think about the Reality Bug. It was designed perfectly, and everyone involved with it was thrilled with it. The only problem was that it was designed too well. While creating it, Aja Killian focused too much on making sure that it did its job, and not enough on making sure that it could only go so far. It worked so well that people’s Lifelight fantasies were not only imperfect—they were also extremely deadly. I also learned that you have to make allowances for imperfection. You always have to think like something is going to go wrong. Do not always put your faith in a single thing; always have a backup plan at hand in case things go wrong. Otherwise, you can find yourself in a terrible plight like the Travelers got into with the Reality Bug. They put all of their faith into it, and did not think about what to do if it went wrong. I know that I will try not to make the same mistake that they did.
I would definitely recommend this book to people. It is a great fantasy and adventure book, so it is good if you are looking for something entertaining to read. During the book, there is also lots of character development, like what I mentioned with Aja earlier. After her computer virus failed, she developed greatly into a very kind and helpful person. All of the characters involved in this story change in ways like that, so you should also read it for that reason. As I said in the beginning, the book gets a little gory, so don’t read it if you don’t like that sort of action. Other than that, it is a great story in every aspect. If you are going to read it, make sure that you read the first three Pendragon books that come before it. The series is like one huge ongoing story split into separate volumes. In the beginning of “The Reality Bug,” the author kind of jumps right back into the story without much of a recap of what happened in the previous books. Without a proper understanding of the plot, I assure you that you will get completely lost. I hope that this review has persuaded you to read “The Reality Bug.” If you do, I guarantee that you will be amazed.