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The Seven Sleepers #1

Flight of the Eagles

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Fourteen-year-old Joshua Adams wakes from a fifty-year sleep to find that he has escaped nuclear war—and that the genetically altered races of Earth now hail his awakening as the first fulfillment of an ancient prophecy.

For of old it was sung that the Seven Sleepers would awaken to unite their strength with Goél and join in battle against the wicked priests of the Sanhedrin. But the choice of Josh and each member of the quest is a dangerous one. He must survive not only the peril of the Sanhedrin but the doubt that threatens his faith and, ultimately, his commitment to Goél, his spiritual champion.

192 pages, Paperback

First published February 1, 1994

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743 people want to read

About the author

Gilbert L. Morris

25 books24 followers
also publishes under the name Gilbert Morris


Gilbert Morris is one of today's best-known Christian novelists. He lives in Gulf Shores, Alabama, with his wife, Johnnie. He is the father to Lynn Morris and Alan Morris

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5 stars
369 (33%)
4 stars
339 (30%)
3 stars
279 (25%)
2 stars
86 (7%)
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24 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 79 reviews
Profile Image for Kyle Timmermeyer.
Author 13 books11 followers
April 17, 2012
This is probably the most obscure YA series I got into at that age. Goofy and preachy as it can be at times, this brings back plenty of good memories, and I'm sure it can still inspire fun times for younger teens today. This book would be best for the teen crowd who has already devoured the Chronicles of Narnia and needs another (more overtly Christian-slanted) fix.
Profile Image for Shaun Stevenson.
Author 21 books41 followers
October 16, 2019
I remember hearing my older brother talk about this series growing up. I never picked up the first book to read it, so I just skipped the whole series. Until now. On a whim I decided to see what my brother had liked so much about the Seven Sleepers series, and picked up book one, Flight of the Eagles.

"Not prepared" is exactly the phrase I would use to describe this fascinating, slightly edgy Christian fantasy novel. The story begins with nuclear war decimating the entire known world, and seven teenagers being left in stasis to wake up and one day save the world from darkness. I kept thinking while I read, "Gilbert Morris isn't going to go there, is he?" And then he would. Parts of this story are gloriously dark for a Christian fantasy series, and parts are obvious allegory. However, Morris weaves so many threads together so deftly, that I was genuinely pulled in throughout the entire book.

That said, the book does show its age. Some of the conversations from one character in particular venture on slightly racist, however, this character does grow and change throughout the book, and his attitude is portrayed as not one that is loving towards others. There is an underlying tension between the lone African American character and the Southern "cowboy," and in the climate of today's racial tensions, this seemed very real and yet uncomfortable. Parents should certainly read this ahead of time to determine what they think for their own kids with regard to some of the non-politically correct things characters say here and there on this topic. Nothing is in the actual narrative, and Morris seems to be working at portraying these characters as having attitudes that are their own.

All said, some of the final plot twists are somewhat apparent from the beginning, but other mysteries unravel in surprising ways.

Here's on to book two!
Profile Image for thirtytwobirds.
105 reviews56 followers
January 2, 2022
Continuing to reread my way through my childhood bookshelf, I'm at the Seven Sleepers series. As a kid growing up in rural PA where the only bookstore in my town was a Christian bookstore these books were one of the very few complete fantasy series I could manage to get, so I read them quite a few times growing up.

Rereading them now I don't think I'd recommend them, even to kids. The internet has made it so easy to get your hands on far, far better books (e.g. Chronicles of Prydain) that it's just not worth wasting time on these.

That's not to say they're *complete* trash. There's a nugget of a good story here, especially in the first 1/3 of the book which is actually fairly good if you can ignore the complete disregard for how biology works. But after that the problems start to emerge:

1. Everything after the first 1/3 feels *incredibly* rushed (fitting 7 quests into this short of a book is just too much).
2. Basically no character development at all for most of the characters (probably a consequence of 1).
3. The romanticizing of the Confederate south is gross.
4. The Christian propaganda starts to get heavier and overbearing at the end.
5. The enemy isn't really explained at all, they're just generic bad guys with no motivations other than we-must-conquer-the-world.
6. There series as a whole uses really obvious tropes all the time. This isn't terrible as a kid, but now there's only so many times you can see the "No man may X? Well surprise, I'm a woman!" plot twist before it just gets painful.
Profile Image for Kate Willis.
Author 24 books570 followers
Read
December 28, 2024
This was my one of my husband's favorite series when he was younger, so I agreed to try at least the first book.
I love me a good post-apocalyptic setting, so the world building was fun. I also enjoyed the quest-based storyline and the themes of God always providing.

Unfortunately, there were some outdated stereotypes and wording. There was also a Southern character who was very much into the Civil War and doubtful of the Black character. It was also very referential to other fantasy.
Profile Image for Hanna.
Author 2 books80 followers
July 29, 2020
Generally, I am not a fan of fantasy. However, the Seven Sleepers series is written by Gilbert Morris. So, why not? This is a different form of fantasy, in my opinion, though. Gilbert Morris contemplates what could happen in the end times. It's slightly unrealistic, of course, and a little confusing at times. Since I don't read too many fantasy books, I always get confused with those kind. (Except for the Narnia books) But I think that anyone who likes, say, Keeper of the Lost Cities, would enjoy these. And it can get you thinking logically about the end times, even though the Seven Sleepers books don't accurately portray life.
Profile Image for Anne Hamilton.
Author 57 books184 followers
July 27, 2015
I was anticipating something with the subtle spiritual nuances of The Chronicles of Narnia, but the story seemed inordinately thin and the plot was a series of happenings, rather than a tapestry of conflict and resolution. Perhaps my expectations were simply too high.
Profile Image for Toby Pitts.
169 reviews7 followers
July 19, 2023
I've been sleeping on this series for about 19 years (pun intentional). My best gal continually told me I needed to read them and I would try and retry, continuously dnf'ing it. Managing to get this first book down once as a child and now as an adult I have lots of thoughts. Since no one in this season is talking about these books to appreciate my excursion down memory lane I'll simply write to myself on this winding journey.
Bullets:
1. Josh annoyed me as a child. WHAT A Wet blanket.
2. Josh still annoys me as an adult. I think Josh is the reason I went into reading Percy Jackson or Harry Potter expecting to hate the Main Character. He is no Harry and incredibly hard to root for. I understand 14 is a difficult time, regardless of being placed in a time capsul and finding out your world is dead upon awaking. But, why is this kid so relentlessly whiney and immature?
3. Sara is not much better.
4....I think Jake was found third.... it is incredibly hard to remember when we meet Jake because it is essentially the first and final time we will ever see him.
(Maybe Reb was 3rd?)
5. >>>Speaking of Reb, I remembered there being a South vs slave plot, but it's handled incredibly poorly. It bothered me as kid and it bothered me now. I'm honestly sad about this. WIth having SEVEN books it is such a shame there couldn't have been a slow burn to the friendship of REb and Wash. We could have seen them fight and struggle to get along and then maybe in book six start to become aware of bias and hate. Unfortunately we instead are given a miraculous resolution to the racism by the conclusion of this book....which i should remind you is number one. It's hard to make this circumstance worse, however, REbs racism will raNdomly showcase itself due to influence of the dark forces in later books- again being messy . Its honestly unnecessary and unfortunate if you are not going to make it purposeful within the storytelling. If we are teaching kids about Remember the Titans we best be doing it well. THis, tragically is probably why this kids series fell off the earth a bit. I know anyone my age and younger is going to especially hate how there is oddly a confederate flag wielding feel, amidst the push to showcase racism resolution. Its ugly. It. will leave you sitting uncomfortable,...and not in the right way.
6. Josh and Sara get too much screen time, even for book one. I'm not sure how this will go as I read the rest of the series, but its clear that each book will have one focus on one sleeper. Regardless of that dynamic, these two are too dull to carry us forward.
7. I like the world, but I wish we had more story and character building before going to the sleep chambers. My assumption is there are big constraints to number of pages for this age range, but - kids are really willing to sit and read an epic story. Harry Potter is LONG and kids don't mind. This series has a GREAT concept but never enough time to build characters.
8. I hate the gemini twins. ...there i said it. As a kid they bugged me. as an adult they bug me.
I hope we don't see them till 7 hahahahaha
9. Kids shoved. into time capsules? Brilliant. Love it. just give me more....
10. I want the Stephen king or brandon sanderson version of this series. we deserve it. These books deserve a more legendary story. I actually highly recommended Fairy Tale (King) if you want a similar feel, just more adult and fleshed out.
I've genuinely wondered if this series was a "kid friendly version" of King's Dark Towers series. Although I haven't read Dark Towers, Many seem to believe Fairy Tale was within that same universe.
Concept 5/5
Setting 2/5
Characters 2.5/5
Spiritual System 3/5
Magical Objects/creatures 2/5
Plot 3/5
Coherence 5/5
Romance 1/5
Audio Reader -3/5 (great until the women come up)
Series so far.... we will see

Final Verdict- Josh needed a longer naptime
Profile Image for Cora Rattle.
76 reviews1 follower
March 24, 2025
I originally read The Seven Sleepers series growing up with my older sister and best friend. We’d take turns reading the chapters aloud and for that reason, this series has a special and fond place in my heart.

I remember enjoying the storyline(s) and characters and thought I’d revisit it for a quick, light read.

Some components held up and others didn’t.

The series is definitely YA (Christian), but some of the fish-based elements felt forced and a bit cheesy at times. Additionally, some of the character development and lack thereof was jarring.

Overall, I still enjoyed the reread. On to book two.
27 reviews2 followers
July 17, 2024
Terrific to share with my 8-year-old grandson. We loved reading it together!
Profile Image for Oceane McAllister.
Author 2 books39 followers
December 29, 2024
The NOSTALGIA. Though to be fair, I haven’t read this series in a very long time.
Profile Image for S. J..
328 reviews53 followers
April 20, 2013
*3 Stars*

A post-apocalyptic story concerning a young man named Joshua and a young girl named Sarah who are placed in sleeper pods after at terrible war threatens to destroy all life on Earth (this was printed in 1990, probably less then a year after the fall of the Berlin wall, thus the world destroyed by Nuclear holocaust is understandable as a story element). Joshua is woken a hundred years later to a world that is nothing like the one he remembers. Bows and arrows and swords are the weapons of the time and dwarves, Giants, and other 'mythical-esque' creatures are the norm. An ancient creature named Crusoe (no word pun there *sarcasm*) has woken him and helps prepare him for a quest: to wake the Seven Sleepers (minus himself now) and help bring about the beginnings of a revolution by the House of Goél (which will be the bane of my existence in future reviews because of that e). Along the way, the travelers meet up with the bads of this world, the Sanhedrin, who chases them across the world as their time runs out to get to the final Sleepers.

*The Gush*
This a quick, exciting read that should appeal to both boys and girls alike. The characters, even with the sheer volume of them that appears, are interesting and in most cases don't get lost in the story. Some we see longer then others, but each will shine in their own way as the series progresses. The character of Crusoe is wonderful, a classic mentor type who also understands that these are children and are struggling with the loss of their world and all those they loved. Joshua is a self-conscience, unsure young man who is thrust into a position and idea he never would have chosen for himself. While basically a good kid, he is a kid and makes mistakes. All of the characters do; they are very human and one of the strongest parts of this book. The story is a classic quest story filled with exciting near misses as well as coincidental happenings that move the plot along...except that they aren't coincidences. Goél is quite obviously Jesus (or Aslan - see below) who is gathering his people to him to battle the evil ruling the world. The Seven Sleepers are to help him, be his agents as he gathers the world together. The Sanhedrin is very stereotypically the bad, evil but there are interesting little tidbits. They have a sort of mind control and the head of them once states, "Don't you know that once in Oldworld a baby was born in a lowly place - just a common child like these - and that one child wrenched the entire world from our graps!" So clearly they are the descendents, maybe, at least spiritually of the Sanhedrin Jesus faced. The Christian message is very overt in this but I would not say it is 'preachy'. It is simply woven into the story so much that you can't separate it from the rest of the book.

*The Rant*
There is nothing really majorly wrong with this book. It does rather ring like a lesser brother of C. S. Lewis' Narnia series, because it does many of the same things but I would argue not quite so well. That is not to say it is bad or you shouldn't read it, but one can't help but compare the two. It is also a bit dated now. Since most of it takes place in 'Nuworld' that is not a huge problem, but it shows particularly in this one because it is the first of the series and as such partly takes place in 'our' world. The threat of Nuclear Apocalypse is perhaps again starting to be relevant with the current issues facing the world, but we are simply not as steeped in it as most people would have been who read this series when it first came out. As I said, it shows mostly in this book, and is only for a couple of the first chapters.

*Conclusion*
This a solid work of children's Christian fiction. If you have issues with Christian fiction, this is probably not for you, though the story itself is very interesting and I do recommend it. While not the best piece of children's fiction I've ever read, it is engaging and well worth the quick read it is.
Profile Image for Jane.
265 reviews3 followers
December 7, 2024
Gilbert Morris’ The Seven Sleepers series begins with Flight of the Eagles, which sets the precedent for silly dialogue, poor pacing, and simplistic morality that will define the entire series. However, Morris manages to hit a better stride about halfway through the book, and Christian kids will find a few good morsels here and there to sink their teeth into. Interestingly, the series (particularly Flight of the Eagles) is based on the ancient Christian legends of the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus, who escaped Roman persecution by sleeping for centuries in a cave and emerging as apostles. Morris’ work bears little resemblance to the original folklore, but he certainly does a lot of something in 180 pages.

The plot follows 14-year-old Josh Adams, who is saved on the eve of the end of the world by being put into a cryogenic sleep capsule, only to awaken fifty years later and find the Earth completely changed into a nuclear wasteland filled with strange creatures. Josh learns that he is the first of the prophesied Seven Sleepers, who will supposedly bring an end to the evil Sanhedrin priests and the dark forces at work, but all Josh receives as guidelines are ancient riddles and the mysterious help of a spiritual man named Goél. As Josh and his ragtag group of survivors search for the other six Sleepers and navigate the trappings of the Sanhedrin, Josh must learn to rely on Goél and to find courage within his insecurities.

Even as a thirteen-year-old, I recognized that Flight of the Eagles was goofy. Morris’ writing is so painfully simplistic, always relying on “tell” instead of “show.” His writing lacks the cleverness to make the simplicity charming. The exposition is rushed, the dialogue is painful (humans don’t speak that way and never have), and the creativity is horrendously lacking (Nuworld? Oldtime? Forbidden Land? The Quest?). So much of Flight of the Eagles is like a much-worse version of better works of fiction like The Chronicles of Narnia, The Pilgrim’s Progress, and The Hobbit (and honestly even The Dark Tower). Morris’ worldbuilding is lazy and uncreative, relying on trite tropes, and the few creative elements he includes (like the lake tower and the Snakepeople) are not used or explained in any satisfying way.

Morris also attempts a bit much in the second half of the novel, though that half is certainly the stronger part. Josh has to find the other six Sleepers in their various hidden locations, but Morris only fleshes out a few of these Sleepers, saving the rest for later novels. The Sanhedrin, though intimidating and ruthless, are such laughably one-dimensional cartoon villains that their incompetence is almost hilarious. Flight of the Eagles is, unfortunately, filled with these unintentionally hilarious moments. The depiction of Goél is a major highlight of the second half of the novel, but even his miracles feel rushed and unacknowledged beyond a simple “huh.” Flight of the Eagles is just painfully predictable , and the dichotomy of good and evil is clumsily depicted as entirely one-dimensional.

Capitalizing on the fear of nuclear war so prevalent in the 1980s and 1990s, Morris uses the vaguest possible “science” to explain a totally illogical premise for the entire novel: seven young teenagers are cryogenically frozen using advanced technology, then are tasked with quite literally saving the world fifty years later. Morris’ rapid-fire exposition is full of plot holes a mile wide, including but not limited to: Why were these teenagers chosen and by whom? If the government had cryogenic technology, why just seven kids? How has the entire landscape, populace, and language transformed into a full-on Dungeons and Dragons-style fantasy world in just 50 years? What are the Sanhedrin and why do they have mind control powers? Is Morris implying that Nuworld is in the middle of the Great Tribulation, since Dedron apparently refuses to get the Mark of the Beast? That’s about one-eighth of the questions I wrote down while rereading Flight of the Eagles.

Naturally, there are things to appreciate about Flight of the Eagles. Morris writes with an earnest simplicity that can be grating at times and endearing at others. The Song of Goél as the driving force of the narrative is a good concept (though of course it will never be brought up in the series again), and the depiction of Goél as a wise leader and spiritual savior is a nice touch to the allegorical elements. Josh Adams is a surprisingly good protagonist — constantly struggling with his self-worth and immaturity, dealing with his home being gone forever, having to kill for the first time — and his growth into a leader is excellent. Sarah Collingwood is a warm complement to Josh, and though their romantic attraction is a little stilted, it at least plants the seeds for a relationship that will blossom later. The various Nuworld characters are one-dimensional but fun, though Crusoe is definitely the standout..

Though the character dynamics are overly juvenile, there are a few good relationships (like Josh and Crusoe as confidants, and Josh and Dave Cooper as rivals) that come to compelling conclusions. The fifth sleeper, Bob Lee “Reb” Jackson, is an obvious standout character with his colorful dialogue and golden retriever energy. Morris, however, adds a surprising level of depth by characterizing Reb as a Southern bigot with a racist streak, something that Morris thankfully highlights as problematic (you never know with these 1990s Christian authors). I wish Morris had let the tension between Reb and the only black Sleeper, Wash Jones, play out a little more through the series though, as their quick resolution of racial tension is a bit iffy. Morris sets up a few relationships, influences, and dynamics that will come into play later in the series, but he stays mostly on track by focusing on a few Sleepers at a time.

Morris’ primary Christian lesson in Flight of the Eagles is to trust God’s voice, even when it doesn’t seem to make sense, and to be careful what voices you listen to. It’s basically an allegory with the sheer amount of Christian symbolism, though I take issue with how simple Morris makes the process of decoding prophecies… and how he implies that everything in the Bible should be taken literally (at least in some cases). Still, Goél’s choosing and commissioning of the Seven Sleepers is nicely done, as is the implication of the power and intimacy of being specifically chosen. Goél and the Seven Sleepers all encompass elements of the Messiah theme, and we get a baptism and saintly-vision theme with Josh and Sarah. Morris also chooses to highlight the trappings of mysticism for curious young people, though, of course, it’s a blink-and-you-miss-it sort of deal.

Flight of the Eagles isn’t a great book, but it certainly isn’t horrible either. Morris does make a genuine effort at differentiating the dialogue between characters, but his writing is still clumsy, simplistic, and rushed, even for young readers. Don’t read this one for the worldbuilding or the creativity: read it to kill some time and enjoy a few decently-executed plot points, especially if you’re under twelve years old.
Profile Image for Kendra Ardnek.
Author 68 books278 followers
August 7, 2016
Not the best Christian fantasy I've ever read, but I probably would have loved it when I was younger. It's kinda weird and takes a lot of suspension of belief, not many of the characters are very memorable, and there's lots of awkward or stiff wording, but the idea behind it is pretty unique (even if it's not very realistic, even for fantasy). The Christian message comes across strongly, but it doesn't feel like I'm being hit across the head with it. I'll continue the series, since my church library owns all of it, and the sequel series.

I loved the Gemini twins though, that was a really cool idea.
Profile Image for Samuel Hinkle.
96 reviews20 followers
January 30, 2020
This series is probably the first that I ever chose to start reading (The Chronicles of Narnia was my first, but mom read the first two to me). and for those of you who know me, this is the book that made me like to write poetic riddles. I enjoyed ever minute of these ten books and because I liked them so well, even read a civil war romance series by Mr. Morris as well. And for me, that's saying something!
Profile Image for Melmo.
21 reviews
July 31, 2011
SHUT UP! Does anyone else remember the Seven Sleeper series??? I want to read them all again!! This calls for a trip to the library.. very soon.
Profile Image for Patrick S..
485 reviews29 followers
March 18, 2025
I did not read these as a child but did read them as part of a book discussion with a group from the Periapsis Press site that plans to review the series. While the initial start of the book appears to be more sci-fi in nature, with the nuclear apocalypse, this book reads more like a fantasy novel. I can see the appeal to the reading audience of teenage boys and girls who grew up Christian, albiet in 1994 - and this, this reads very much of the time of the 90s YA. There is that charm to it that doesn't know the weirder world to come post-2000s.

Having normals characters of Josh and Sarah as the main focus of the boy and girl, the fact that they are just normal is odd with the YA (and YA post-apocalypse) genres in the post-2016s. But with seven characters to find in this book Morris flies through the story so fast. Having the puzzles to solve is fun but there's not time for the reader to "help" in the discovery before the characters figure it out as quick as Robin always figured out the Riddler's very specific riddles in the '66 Batman. But without a doubt, the inclusion of Reb is the best character. He has the best lines. He has the best takes. Those that view him a "problematic" don't realize the time period from where these characters came from to turn into different characters after learning their lesson. But reading anything with Reb is a hoot.

The rest of the plot is pretty bland. I have no clue who the bad guys really are or what they want. There is no "Aslan is Jesus" here it's just "Jesus is Jesus" here. However, what's odd about this story is the lack of people mentioning God or Jesus; no conversion moment; no one talking about the Bible or cringe storytelling found in 90s Christian fiction. Which in one sense is quite interesting here but Morris does nothing with it as there are too many characters, too little on the plot, too little of the pacing, and some too straightforward deus ex moments.

However, it's not a bad book just a bit too bland story. From other readers, it seems like after book one things pace themselves out more and the bad guys get more fleshed out. As for this one, it falls into the "meh" category. Final Grade - C-
Profile Image for Melissa.
185 reviews
January 11, 2024
Alright. I really enjoyed the first 2-4(? can't remember) books in this series as a kid, and have remembered loving them all this time, but I never finished the series, so I've decided this is the year to do it. I'm committed to trudging through this task in its entirety despite what I've just experienced (for the first time in 20 years) reading book 1.

Wow. It's dated even for being written in 1990 - the author was 61 when it was released (unless my math is that bad, and, it could be) and it shows. I cringed at quite a few things even prior to a certain rebel Sleeper's awakening (who at least grew up a small bit in the story).

There's a few nuggets of Biblical wisdom throughout but nothing at all original - Morris was no Lewis, that's for certain. There's no character development and little to no real introduction to the main characters to paint an adequate picture of any of them, certainly not enough to connect or care that deeply, and it moves way too quickly, just constant movement > dialogue > movement > dialogue > movement > dialogue. There's PLENTY of excellent books with depth, beauty, and complexity at this reading level out there so that's not a viable excuse here at all.

It's an interesting idea to build a world based on the Christian/Islamic legend of the Seven Sleepers (found in the Quran or a quick Google search). I have always thought that about it. I'm just disappointed it seriously hasn't held the test of time and my 10/11-year-old self definitely thought this was better than it is.
Profile Image for Lizzie  J.
305 reviews32 followers
May 2, 2018
I read this series once a couple of years ago, and I didn't overly like it. I didn't remember it, so I decided to give it another try to see if maybe I would enjoy it more now that I'm a little older and have more varied reading tastes... Nope. I still wasn't really feeling the vibe for this series.

I find the characters really flat, kind of annoying, and way too happy-dappy. In some parts of the book when the characters are interacting, it feels more like a Barney episode than a couple of young teenagers trying to do...something (now that I'm trying to think about it, I don't believe the book ever really said exactly why they were put to sleep and stuff. Maybe it comes in later.)

I really wanted to bang my head when Crusoe turned out to be Josh's dad.

The plot was just eh. I felt like there was no real conflict. The characters never had to really do anything or show anything in order to get out of their predicament. I liked the Christian twist to the story, but I did feel like it could have been better done.


Swearing: None

Sexual content: None

Violence: Basically none. There's some fighting at the end (and I'm still not sure how young teenagers knew how to fight with swords and bows and stuff...)

Religious/spiritual/magical content: The book is written with a pretty obvious Christian theme throughout it.
Profile Image for Lucius Malfoy.
202 reviews20 followers
January 2, 2024
The funny thing about being raised Christian is that while so many of your contemporaries are off reading Harry Potter, you are given these very niche weird little Christian fantasy novels. The thing is, so many of them slapped. Is slapped still a slang term? I don't know, only that it feels like the right word for this book in particular.

The premise is super dark. It quite literally starts with a nuclear war obliterating the entire world. Seven teenagers are saved when they are placed in sleeping pods--hence the name The Seven Sleepers.--and are each woken up during the series and are our heroes.

The characters are flat and the Christian allegory is not exactly nuanced, but I have thought about this series at least once a month for years and years. I don't know why. I guess reading a kid's book when you are eight that starts with the world being destroyed kind of sticks with a girl?

It's just a super weird story, and I mean that as a compliment. Gilbert L. Morris really didn't need to go this hard, yet I am grateful he did.
52 reviews1 follower
March 27, 2025
I really enjoyed this. I realize it’s a Christian genre of fiction which is new (ish) for me, but it was a quick read with uplifting moments. The reviews on good reads were very critical so I was bracing myself but it was a satisfying story. Good to read about youth taking on a quest! Lots to think about and characters captured young people’s awkwardness/development. For sure could have been longer with more world building and detail but it was kind of fun that it was left to my own thinking and imagination. Perhaps the remainder of the series develops the world and characters more. There were a lot of characters!!
99 reviews
September 7, 2025
I’m not entirely sure how I feel about this book. I like the dystopian theme, the nuworld beings and changes to the world. I like the idea of the 7 sleepers saving the world but Goel is way too much like Jesus. I don’t have any issues with reading religious books, this just kinda feels taboo in a sense. I don’t think I’m going to read the rest of the series… if it wasn’t this super similar to religion saviour type I think I would have read the rest of the series but I’m going to DNF unfortunately.
Profile Image for Miri.
20 reviews5 followers
Read
April 10, 2024
I read this absolutely surreal book when I was in fifth grade back in 2007/2008. I checked it out from my (Christian) school library and it kept me up many nights in a row thinking about the nuclear apocalypse that now seemed inevitable. Over the years I completely forgot the name of the book and couldn’t find it anywhere on the internet and became convinced it was just some weird fever dream I had when I was 11. But no. It’s REAL.
Profile Image for Marji Morris.
657 reviews5 followers
January 8, 2023
I picked this book because of the fantasy/apocolypse topic. I was not aware it was a Christian allegory. If that appeals to you, you might enjoy this YA novel. Personally, I thought the allegory was heavy-handed. and I felt as if I'd been beaten over the head with the point. It's the first in a series. It is a quick read.
8 reviews
October 26, 2020
Read this in middle school, enjoyed it then but its been a loooong time. I just remember loving the sci fi and fantasy elements of the story and being disappointed when I couldn't find the sequels in my school library.
Profile Image for Matt Starr.
Author 1 book17 followers
November 24, 2020
As fast as the pace was and as much fun as some of the characters were, I was underwhelmed by the setup and subsequent world building and the numerous times the characters were saved from their situations by this universe’s version of God.
23 reviews
February 4, 2021
This series is great. I first read the series when I was 9 and is written for the younger teen age group but I reread it recently at 16 and still loved it. It is clean and teaches good morals. I would recommend it to anyone who enjoys christian fantasy.
Profile Image for Mandy Boerma.
Author 9 books56 followers
February 23, 2021
I'm reading this series to my youngest (six years old), after my oldest daughter (nine years old) read them. What an incredible series! The characters are likable, the adventures captivating, and their lessons amazing. Great read.
3 reviews
January 29, 2024
When reading this book I was a bit worried I wasn’t going to like the other books because in the first book they found all the people but the Aventures where Amazing which is why I finished the whole series
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for JeLy.
173 reviews
July 22, 2025
An allegory that was pushed too far for me. No content issues (except 12 and 13 year olds noticing how pretty / handsome the other one is, etc.). I didn't really like how the "dwarves" were described or Wash (sp?)-- seemed to lean slightly into stereotypes. Just wasn't for me.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 79 reviews

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