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Loading... Ugliesby Scott Westerfeld
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Member recommendations:dragonspit recommends The diary of Pelly D by L. J. Adlington cathylin recommends Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, "futuristic world again, but the teens have to compete and fight to the death in a televised reality show." KamTonnes recommends The Giver by Lois Lowry, "Uglies and The Giver both portray societies that limit conflict by having very specific rules, roles, and expectations for everyone. Also, in both stories, (see more) the main characters slowly start to question the values of their respective communities." Bitter_Grace recommends The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau TheBentley recommends Brave New World by Aldous Huxley ( see more recommendations and anti-recommendations for this book )
Amazon.com (ISBN 1416911049, Paperback)Playing on every teen's passionate desire to look as good as everybody else, Scott Westerfeld (Midnighters) projects a future world in which a compulsory operation at sixteen wipes out physical differences and makes everyone pretty by conforming to an ideal standard of beauty. The "New Pretties" are then free to play and party, while the younger "Uglies" look on enviously and spend the time before their own transformations in plotting mischievous tricks against their elders. Tally Youngblood is one of the most daring of the Uglies, and her imaginative tricks have gotten her in trouble with the menacing department of Special Circumstances. She has yearned to be pretty, but since her best friend Shay ran away to the rumored rebel settlement of recalcitrant Uglies called The Smoke, Tally has been troubled. The authorities give her an impossible choice: either she follows Shay's cryptic directions to The Smoke with the purpose of betraying the rebels, or she will never be allowed to become pretty. Hoping to rescue Shay, Tally sets off on the dangerous journey as a spy. But after finally reaching The Smoke she has a change of heart when her new lover David reveals to her the sinister secret behind becoming pretty. The fast-moving story is enlivened by many action sequences in the style of videogames, using intriguing inventions like hoverboards that use the rider's skateboard skills to skim through the air, and bungee jackets that make wild downward plunges survivable -- and fun. Behind all the commotion is the disturbing vision of our own society -- the Rusties -- visible only in rusting ruins after a virus destroyed all petroleum. Teens will be entranced, and the cliffhanger ending will leave them gasping for the sequel. (Ages 12 and up) --Patty Campbell(retrieved from Amazon Mon, 19 Nov 2007 03:58:10 -0500) |
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