Saturday, March 13, 2010

Uglies


Bibliographic Info


Title:  Uglies

Author:  Scott Westerfeld

Publisher: Simon Pulse

Publication Date:  2005

ISBN:  9780689865381

Plot Summary


Tally stares out of her window in Uglyville to the party towers, tethered hot air balloons, and fireworks in New Pretty Town.  With only three months left until her 16th birthday, all she can do is wait until that day when she’ll be surgically stretched and shrunk in all the right places, her face transformed into whatever gloriously beautiful design the Pretty Committee chooses.  Only then will she join her best friend Peris and the party in New Pretty Town.  It’s what she’s been waiting for for forever.

When Tally meets fellow ugly, Shay, life is bearable again.  Shay teaches Tally to hoverboard, and the two come up with clever pranks to pass the time.  At least Tally’s passing the time.  More than once Shay talks about not wanting the operation to turn pretty.  Somehow she’s content with the way she and Tally look as uglies.  She also talks about a mysterious guy who she can supposedly summon in the Rusty Ruins, a ruined city from the days when people carelessly destroyed nature, each other, and finally themselves.  Just before the two are set to turn sixteen and pretty, Shay springs something major on Tally – there’s a group of people living out in the wilderness who never turn pretty and Shay’s running away to join them.  She wants Tally to come too.

Tally stays behind with only a cryptic note telling her where her friend has gone.  Then, on the day when it’s all set to end – the confusion over letting Shay disappear into the wild by herself, the longing for her best friend Peris, the waiting to turn pretty – the authorities inform Tally that she’ll either follow Shay’s note to uncover a troublesome group of renegades, or Tally will stay ugly forever.  Her decision leads her on a journey that changes everything, inside and out.

Critical Evaluation


Uglies stars out as a journey into a fantastical futuristic world of floating cars, hovering bridges, and goods that appear out of a hole in the wall and recycle themselves into dust just as quickly.  It’s a world of flawless beauty and absolutely carefree lifestyles.

As the story progresses, the dark side of this carefree life starts to show.  The story leaves readers questioning how much freedom people are willing to hand over in favor of comfort and ease.  It also shows the power of manipulation that makes people give up everything – their appearance, their interests, their certainties, in order to be normal.

Reader’s Annotation


What would you give up to join a world of ultimate perfection?

Author Info


Scott Westerfeld is an author of adult and young adult fiction.  He was born in 1963 in Dallas, Texas.  He has held jobs as a textbook editor, substitute teacher, computer programmer, and factory worker.

Scott Westerfeld and his wife Justin e Larbalestier (also a writer) live in New York City and Sydney Australia.  He enjoys Mexican and Thai food and never wears jeans.  Never!

Westerfeld, S. (2011, March 11). Westerblog. Retrieved April 14, 2010, from http://scottwesterfeld.com/blog/

Genre


Science Fiction

Curriculum Ties


Environmental Science

Philosophy

Book Talking Ideas


Discuss:  How much do you think the media influences your idea of pretty?

Reading Level


12 and up.

Challenge Issues


Drinking, alludes to casual sexual encounters.

Challenge Responses


Active listening

Refer to library’s collection policy

Provide complaint form

Refer to book reviews

Selection


Noted as an ALA Best Book for Young Adults in 2006.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Little Brother


Bibliographic Info


Title: Little Brother

Author: Cory Doctorow

Publisher: Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

Publication Date: 2008

ISBN: 9780765323118

Plot Summary


Marcus Yallow’s got his world wired – cool parents, good friends, the upper hand when it comes to his blustering vice-principal.  The worst he’s got to worry about is busting himself and his best friend out of sixth period to meet friends for his team sport of choice – an alternate reality game that’s part treasure hunt, part logic puzzle, and part trivia dig.

Getting out of class is no big trick though.  His school relies overmuch on technology in everything from snitching standard-issue laptops to gait recognition cameras, to library check-out systems on steroids, which monitor students’ locations as they pass sensors.  Marcus has his tech down though, and hacks around laptop surveillance; he’s got a solution for every prying piece of technology.

At the moment when a terrorist bomb hits San Francisco, Marcus’ carefree days are done.  He’s hauled in by the Department of Homeland Security as a possible terror suspect and is alternately humiliated, threatened, and tortured for days before he’s released.

Marcus returns to a world he doesn’t recognize where police will question anyone for taking a detour on the way home, schools start preaching anti-free speech propaganda; even Marcus’ father seems taken in by the need for the government to have their eye on absolutely everything.  And then there’s Marcus’ best friend Darryl.  Along with Marcus and two friends, Darryl was also taken to the makeshift prison, nicknamed Gitmo by the Bay.  Darryl never came back.  So with technology, with smarts, and with likeminded kids in numbers, Marcus decides to fight back.

Critical Evaluation


Smart, fast, yet with depth and complexity, Little Brother will appeal to anyone with a tech bent.  The issues blown up and examined in this story would likely touch a broader audience as we’re living in post 9-11 world, where the potential for terrorist attacks is actual, and if unchecked, could be upstaged by how our government, our teachers, and our neighbors respond.

Reader’s Annotation


Marcus Yallow is a smart, tech-savvy high school senior.  He’s got things set in his favor, but when a terrorist bomb hits his city of San Francisco, the U.S government makes him a target.  They don’t count on him fighting back.

Author Info


Cory Doctorow is a blogger, journalist, and author.  He’s an activist for copyright issues.  Doctorow co-founded a free peer to peer software corporation in 1999 and served as the first Independent Studies Scholar in Virtual Residence as the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada in 2009.

Doctorow was born in Canada in 1971.  He now lives in London with his wife, Alice Taylor, and their daughter Poesy Emmeline Fibonacci Nautilus Taylor Doctorow.

Doctorow, C. (2010, February 3). Cory Doctorow's Craphound.com. Retrieved April 14, 2010, from http://craphound.com/bio.php

Genre


Science Fiction

Curriculum Ties


Government Study, especially U.S. Constitution.

Book Talking Ideas


Do you feel safe?  Discuss:  Growing up after 9/11, do you feel threatened by terrorists?  Do you feel like your privacy is respected by our government, by your school?

Reading Level


13 and up.

Challenge Issues


Anti-government, anti-authority.

Challenge Responses


Active listening

Refer to library’s collection policy

Provide complaint form

Refer to book reviews

Selection


Assigned.