Last year, one of my students read Monument 14 by Emmy Laybourne. At the time, I dismissed it. But when I found myself in the Learning Commons (formerly known as the Media Center) and saw it on the shelf, I figured it couldn't hurt.
The main plot of this novel is that there is a super-Tsunami that causes all sorts of unique weather patterns. The storm erupts on the main characters' way to school; their bus driver manages to crash the bus into a Superstore (reminds me of Walmart). The kids survive in the store while many outside are dying due to lack of resources, harmful chemicals in the air, and citizen violence.
This book reminded me so much of the Life As We Knew It series I read last year. Here are several things that were in common: dystopian; involved people doing crazy things for food; characters struggling to survive; learning to help others when disaster strikes; and they are both part of a series.
There was one major difference though. The characters in Monument 14 had to be smart, but they had everything they needed (at least the main characters who were inside the Superstore). The ones outside, well, they were another story. The characters did not starve - there was plenty of food, appliances, clothing. Due to their location, they had whatever they needed. In the other series, they were not so fortunate. The main characters were at home. No stockpile of goods, no grocery stores, no garden. Their survival was more real and desperate.
If you like dystopian lit, I'd recommend both of these books. I haven't read the 2nd or 3rd book of the Monument 14 series, but I devoured all four in the Life As We Knew It series last spring. If you liked The Hunger Games, it's worth a shot. I feel like dystopian novels are fun to read - they are a good escape from the "real world" but always leave me feeling like I need to prepare for the end of the world and stockpile groceries in the basement for an apocalypse.