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Uglies
 
 

Uglies (Turtleback)

by Scott Westerfeld (Author) "The early summer sky was the color of cat vomit ..." (more)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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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 --This text refers to the Paperback edition.


Books in Canada

In Scott Westerfeld's page-turning and thought-provoking first book (of his new trilogy about a future world), young Uglies live in the Orwellian, state-controlled, high-density dorms of Uglyville. At least this is where they're kept until they turn sixteen. Then they're eligible for the secret operation that transforms them into mind-benumbed but drop-dead gorgeous, eye-popping Pretties partying daily across the river in their high-tech world of New Pretty Town with its own rules of, "Act Stupid, Have Fun and Make Noise."
Westerfeld's heroine, Tally Youngblood, is just three months shy of the magic morphing she has yearned for since childhood when she meets worldly-wise Shay. Shay, who is convinced ugly is only as ugly does, doesn't want either her brain or her body to be tampered with. In trying to bring Tally over to her way of thinking, Shay shows her how to subvert the sophisticated surveillance systems shielding New Pretty Town, and how to hoverboard like a professional. Sometimes Shay talks to Tally "in a mysterious way, like she was quoting the lyrics of some band no one else listened to," and finally she takes her to meet her legendary boyfriend and anti-Pretty superhero, David, at the Rusty Ruins, the shattered structures from a former world war, on the edge of the wild Smoke zone. It is the no-Pretties-allowed land, where David and his rebel Smokies hide from the cruel Dr. Cable and her Special Circumstances police with their unbridled powers to enforce conformity and the becoming-Pretty operations. Shortly after Shay escapes from Uglyville to join David, Tally, who's still convinced she wants to be a Pretty, is accosted by Dr. Cable, who threatens to cancel Tally's operation unless she helps her police force to track down David, Shay and their kind.
To Westerfeld's credit and the reader's delight, Tally's adventures become a white-knuckled, boot-strap hoverboard ride, as she deciphers a secret code Shay had given her for locating the rebels' hiding place in case she changed her mind and decided to join them. When she gets there the plot twists and turns. Shay becomes jealous of Tally, while David's followers question Tally's motives and loyalty. And while Tally is learning to appreciate the rebels' return-to-nature philosophy and understand their desire for freedom from an big brother conformity of thought and appearance, she accidentally activates Dr. Cable's tracking device, revealing the secret location of the hideout to the Special Circumstances forces, who attack and capture most of the Smokies, including Shay, and David's scientist parents who have been perfecting a pill to reverse the effects of the Ugly-to-Pretty operations. As the story races to its conclusion, David and Tally hoverboard behind enemy lines using chemical glowsticks to light the way. Then while their newly-enlisted band of subversives creates a fireworks diversion, they break into the Special Circumstances Building with the aid of their bungee jackets, powerjacks, and nanotech glue. But whether they arrive in time to rescue Shay, David's parents, and the rest of the Smokies, remains for Westerfeld's readers to find out. There'll be more of his fascinating world to read about as well in Pretties and Specials, the next books in the series. Hopefully, soon and hopefully with just as many highly imaginative challenges to our conventional thinking.
M. Wayne Cunningham (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 (4 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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2 internautes sur 2 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 Excellent, Aoû 7 2008
This review is from: Uglies (Paperback)
Westerfeld's created an amazing world, where being pretty is everything. The book was so good it only took me 2 days to read. Tally's struggle with herself and the truth leads her on an epic journey. The interactions between David and Tally are well thought out, and the plot is thought provoking. Truly a good read.
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3.0étoiles sur 5 Dystopia in Beauty, Oct. 10 2009
This review is from: Uglies (Paperback)
This book took a while to grow on me. At first I wasn't sure what to think. I didn't think it was going to be a futuristic dystopian fiction. So it took me a while to picture the setting while reading the story. Eventually though, I started to like the book. It had a lot of interesting moments and I was curious as to what happened to the world to make it the way it is in the novel. It was a little vague. However you do get an explanation as to what happened near the end of the book.

I wasn't too attached to Tally. She just seemed so shallow and *silly* and pratically obsessed with being Pretty. I understand it sounds so much better than living the hum drum life of being an Ugly but she just wouldn't be stop obsessing over it, it got old quickly. I liked Shay for her thinking and individuality. I thought she did a great job in taking Tally out of her own little shell. However aside from Tally, most of the characters in this novel weren't really rounded out, or even developed. They were just flat. Although the story focused more on Tally it would have been nice to see other characters develop with her as well. Shay does, albeit drastically but it was nice to see Tally mature throughout the book. What bugged me was Tally's anguish over her secret. I was practically yelling at the book wanting her to tell the truth. But then, I figured the book would have probably turned out a lot differently - not sure if for the better.

I liked the plot throughout the novel, although I found it sort of dragged here and there (when Tally is with the Smokies for instance). I was willing to let that go however, because the story did get my attention once I got adjusted to it. It does make a pretty good dystopian fiction novel and the ending does make me want to continue where it left off. There was some science in this book but pretty basic and not enough to be discouraged with scientific jargon. If you're looking for something with action, this book does have it. Tally's journey to find her friend Shay was interesting, as Shay left her directions in some sort of code that Tally would only be able to understand. I particularly liked that because it was like a puzzle she was trying to solve and you went along the journey with her.

Overall, it wasn't the best novel I've read, but it was good enough for me to read through from beginning to end. Would I recommend this? yes why not! I liked the overall theme of beauty and striving to being content with just the way you are, and to be apart from the rest. This is a perfect novel to see what would happen if the obsession of beauty is carried just a few more steps too far.
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3.0étoiles sur 5 A Girl's Must-Read!!, Mars 14 2007
Par Adam Kolacz (St. Albert, Alberta, Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Uglies (Paperback)
The novel The Uglies by Scott Westerfeld is a girl's must-read. Since I am of the male gender, this book about beauty over brains did not really appeal to me. Although, it was still a good read because the characters were properly introduced at the beginning of the book and the plot seemed to flow evenly.
This novel is about a futuristic world where if you are under the age of 16, you are considered an ugly. On your sixteenth birthday, you get an operation that makes you turn into a pretty. Life as a pretty is all about partying and having fun. Our main character, Tally Youngblood, is just weeks away from this life of paradise. However, this all changes when Tally befriends an ugly named Shay. Shay does not want to be changed into a pretty for she wants to stay the way she is. She wants to run away with Tally to an illegal town consisting of other non-pretties. This town is named the Smoke. When Shay runs away, Tally learns the truths about the pretty world, and it is not very pretty. The authorities offer Tally two dreadful choices: she can turn Shay into the police, or she can stay an ugly...forever.
This book is the perfect mix of action, tense situations, and life threatening choices. In a world of brains versus beauty, what would you choose?
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Great
This book is amazing, can you imagine a society were everyone was perfect and pretty? It sounds incredibly shallow but the people who have lived this way for hundreds of years... Read more
Publié le Sep 3 2005 par Rebekka

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