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Summary
Summary
The fate of America hangs in the balance in the fourth and final book in the New York Times bestselling Unwind Dystology series by Neal Shusterman.
Cam was only the start of Proactive Citizenry's plans for rewound teens. The corrupt company is planning to mass-produce rewound teen soldiers, and to keep their profitable plans from being interrupted, they've been suppressing technology that could make unwinding completely unnecessary.
When Conner, Risa, and Lev uncover these startling secrets, enraged teens march on Washington to demand justice and a better future. But more trouble is brewing. Starkey's group of storked teens is growing more powerful and militant with each new recruit. And if they have their way, they'll burn the harvest camps to the ground and put every adult in them before a firing squad.
Can the persecuted teens get the justice they deserve without dooming America to a divided and violent future?
Author Notes
Neal Shusterman was born in Brooklyn, New York on November 12, 1962. He received degrees in psychology and drama from the University of California, Irvine. Within a year of graduating, he had his first book deal and a screenwriting job. He has written numerous books including The Dark Side of Nowhere, Red Rider's Hood, The Shadow Club, The Shadow Club Rising, The Eyes of Kid Midas, Shattered Sky, Unwind, and Antsy Does Time. He won the National Book Award for Young People's Literature in 2015 for Challenger Deep. He also writes several series including the Skinjacker Trilogy, the Star Shards Chronicles, and the Unwind Dystology. As a screen and television writer, he has written for the Goosebumps and Animorphs television series, and wrote the Disney Channel Original Movie Pixel Perfect.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up-In the final book of the "Unwind Dystology," everything comes full circle. Shusterman expertly reminds readers about the characters and their current situations without distracting from the current plot. Teens gain information on all of the key players, and each well-crafted narrative moves at a refreshing pace. Connor and Risa are together again in Sonia's house, with Grace in tow. They have found a way to change people's minds about unwinding by providing other options. Lev is on the reservation but cannot contain his need to fight for what he feels is right. Cam is back with Roberta, and though they try to affect his thoughts and memories, they cannot suppress his genuine contempt for Proactive Citizenry and his creators. Starkey and his storks, on the other hand, are leading a revolt that only makes things worse for the unwinds. Characters old and new are integrated into the story line, providing insight and closure. Shusterman generates a lot of thought-provoking topics for discussion. The story is intriguing: a wonderful end to a unique and noteworthy series.-Kristyn Dorfman, The Packer Collegiate Institute, Brooklyn, NY (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Horn Book Review
Shusterman's dystopian epic concludes with an ambitious, multi-front showdown among the complex forces arrayed for and against "unwinding" -- the legal (and lucrative) harvesting of unwanted teens for their body parts. Teen rebels Connor, Risa, and Lev; "rewind" Cam; anti-unwinding terrorist Starkey; various corporate interests; and a few adult allies -- most significantly, one woman with a technological blueprint that could end medicine's dependence on unwinding -- play crucial roles. Shusterman draws the series' tangled threads into line while deepening his intelligent portrayal of a society grown economically, medically, and politically dependent on unwinding. It's an impressive juggling act, grounded by emotional beats that recall the characters' formative moments (Connor's parents, for instance, take on renewed significance). Attention to character detail aside, UnDivided is ultimately about the big picture, taking a large-scale view of the unimaginable losses that any new world order must address and building on the thesis that it takes not one person or group or revelation but multiple forces working in tandem to effect true revolutionary change. Real recent news articles about the present-day scientific and policy realities presaging Shusterman's imagined future punctuate the narrative, adding to the book's discussion points and highlighting its immediacy and relevance. Ambitious, insightful, and devastating -- a fitting conclusion to a provocative series. claire e. gross (c) Copyright 2014. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
The grisly conclusion to the Unwind Dystology. Times have changed for Connor, Risa, Lev and companythe heroes and heroines of a brave fight to prevent the government from harvesting the organs of unruly teens. Chilling propaganda pushes the Marcella Initiative, a law that would allow the government to unwind teenagers without their parents' permission. Also, Connor and his team find an "organ printer" that could be the answer they need to stop the unwinding atrocities around the globe, and egomaniacal Mason Starkey continues to attack harvest camps across the country with bloodthirsty vengeance. Meanwhile, a gang of evil, elite black-market organ harvesters pursues Connor with deadly intent. Shusterman's finale might be the best one in the series since the first: He cuts straight to the chase with the plotting and creates horrifically heinous supervillians to keep it moving and ensure readers are glued to the edges of their seats. His settings are also dead-on, so to speak: In one iconic, symbolic scene, the Statue of Liberty's arm is replaced with another, and readers can't help but wonder if this is the future. Everything culminates in an action-packed, heart-wrenching conclusion guaranteed to chill readers to the bone. (Dystopian adventure. 12-15) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
The battle for hearts and minds and teenage body parts winds to a dramatic close in this finale to Shusterman's darkly satiric UnWind Dystology. As megalomaniac rebel Starkey ramps up attacks on harvest camps, where teens are sent by the ever-more-powerful Juvenile Authority to be physically unwound, patchwork chimera Camus discovers that he is a prototype for an army manufactured from spare parts, and former volunteer subject Lev looks for a way to spur the Arápache and other Chancefolk tribes to rebel. Meanwhile ruthlessly hunted rebels Conor, Risa, and Grace look for ways to publicize a long-suppressed technological advance that will make unwinding unnecessary. Folding in actual, chillingly relevant news stories, Shusterman expertly brings together a series of crises, betrayals, escapes, self-sacrifices, and desperate ploys, culminating in a massive march on Washington and sea changes in both government rhetoric and public opinion. A true page-turner like the previous books, this is predicated on the truth that major social change comes not from a single significant act but a confluence of smaller ones.--Peters, John Copyright 2014 Booklist