Skinned (Gripping Trilogy Series #1) by Robin Wasserman

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    (Hardcover)

    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 1416936343
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
    • Pub. Date: September 2008
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    Comments from the Seller: BRAND NEW

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    Synopsis

    Lia Kahn was perfect: rich, beautiful, popular — until the accident that nearly killed her. Now she has been downloaded into a new body that only looks human. Lia will never feel pain again, she will never age, and she can't ever truly die. But she is also rejected by her friends, betrayed by her boyfriend, and alienated from her old life.

    Forced to the fringes of society, Lia joins others like her. But they are looked at as freaks. They are hated...and feared. They are everything but human, and according to most people, this is the ultimate crime — for which they must pay the ultimate price.

    VOYA

    In a futuristic society, young terminally ill people can be "downloaded," their brain cut into thin sections and scanned into a computer that is placed in a human-like, mechanical body. Although this new "person" retains complete memories of its former self, in most respects it is quite different, impervious to the human frailties of aging, illness, and bodily functions. When Lia Kahn is fatally burned in an auto accident, her father decides that she should be downloaded. The problem is that no one, including her family and friends, considers her Lia Kahn anymore. Her sister, Zo, steals her boyfriend. Her friends replace Lia with Zo. Students stare at her now that she is no longer cool and comment behind her back, except for Auden, a backward youth who is intrigued by Lia. Quinn, another "skinner," befriends Lia and introduces her to a group of "mech heads" who, unlike Lia, revel in their uniqueness. Lia refuses to admit she is different-until Auden is severely injured trying to "save" Lia from herself. This first book in a planned trilogy deals with the definition of a person. If it walks, talks and looks like one, is it? Wasserman, author of Hacking Harvard (Simon & Schuster, 2007/VOYA February 2008), writes an interesting, fast-paced book, raising many questions that remain unanswered at the end. Her characters are realistic-some likeable, others not. There is little information about the time or place in which the book takes place, which detracts slightly. It might interest fans of Scott Westerfeld's Uglies series. Reviewer: Ed Goldberg

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    Biography

    Robin Wasserman enjoys writing about high school — but wakes up every day grateful that she doesn't have to relive it. She recently abandoned the beaches and boulevards of Los Angeles for the chilly embrace of the East Coast, as all that sun and fun gave her too little to complain about. She now lives and writes in New York City, which she claims to love for its vibrant culture and intellectual life. In reality, she doesn't make it to museums nearly enough, and actually just loves the city for its pizza, its shopping, and the fact that at three A.M. you can always get anything you need — and you can get it delivered.

    Customer Reviews

    A futuristic day of age with many new ideas... Not bad.by kritzy

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    11/03/2009: The book gets many points for originality. How many times have I heard of clothing changing colors, a device playing music according to moods, and acquiring a new, mechanical body? None.

    Lia's dead.. her self-driven car crashed. Her body was beyond repair, so her father requests a procedure be taken so she can live a life, even if it is in a fake skinned mechanical body.

    Lia has trouble adjusting after the procedure.Her life is a mess. Her sister hates her, making her already messy life even more hectic and depressing.

    Only Auden,an outcast that hasn't adapted to the new ways of life, reaches out to her..

    Okay, no more or I'll spoil it. (:

    So, good book in all. Took too long to get going, and even the ending, sad and thrilling as it was, didn't motivate me to read Crashed.

    If you liked Meyer's Host and Westerfield's Uglies series, this a unique futuristic teen book you will surely enjoy.

    I expected moreby Anonymous

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    09/21/2009: I had read the "Uglies Series" by Scott Westerfeld, and this book was suggested to me, compared to Westerfeld, this was disappointing. I fell asleep reading it countless times, it took me several months to actually sit down and just finish it. It was incredibly annoying. The ideas were great, nothing really inspired me though. I hope the second book is better, I really do, because I want to like the series.


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