Tag: science fiction

Unwind is a phenomenal YA science fiction thriller. Following the Heartland War (pro-life vs. pro-choice), unwinding has become the solution for parents with difficult teenagers. Don’t want your child anymore? State can’t afford all its orphans? Have them unwound. Their bodies are stripped for parts sold away to those who want them. Scientists and doctors have figured out how to do this without technically killing the Unwind. Their spirit or soul or life-force, whatever you want to call it, becomes spread out among all the people now sporting their pieces. 100% of each Unwind must be used by law. And no one over 18 can be unwound. So in this world, if you break an arm don’t bother to use a cast and wait for it to heal. If you can afford a brand new teenage arm, buy one.

Read more on Unwind by Neal Shusterman…

What a bizarre book. Inspired in part by The Island of Dr. Moreau, Dr. Franlin’s Island by Ann Halam tells the story of three shipwrecked British teenagers who fall into the hands of a mad scientist. Semi, Arnie, and Miranda are the sole survivors of a plane crash on their way to a scientific program for teens in Ecuador. They survive for weeks alone on the beach before discovering Dr. Franklin’s compound and his horrors of genetic engineering. He holds them as prisoners and alters their DNA in his attempts to make bird/human and fish/human hybrids.

Read more on One Book NJ 2008: Teen Selection…