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  1 Altered
Author: Albin, Gennifer
    Series: Crewel world, #2
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: 12-19
Language: English
LC: PZ7.A322
Grade: 7-12
Print Run: 75000
ISBN-13: 9780374316426
LCCN: 2013011140
Imprint: Farrar Straus & Giroux
Pub Date: 10/29/2013
Availability: Out of Stock Indefinitely
List: $17.99
  Hardcover
Physical Description: 390 pages ; 22 cm. H 8.47", W 7.23", D 1.35", 1.03 lbs.
LC Series: Crewel world ;
Brodart Sources: Brodart's For Youth Interest: Popular
Brodart's Insight Catalog: Teen
Brodart's TOP Young Adult Titles
Brodart's YA Reads for Adults
Bibliographies:
Awards: Horn Book Guide Titles, Rated 1 - 4
Starred Reviews:
TIPS Subjects: Science Fiction
Romance
Family Life
BISAC Subjects: YOUNG ADULT FICTION / Dystopian
YOUNG ADULT FICTION / Science Fiction / Romance
LC Subjects: Interpersonal relations, Fiction
Interpersonal relations, Juvenile fiction
JUVENILE FICTION / Family / Siblings
JUVENILE FICTION / Love & Romance
JUVENILE FICTION / Science Fiction
JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / New Experience
Science fiction
SEARS Subjects: Interpersonal relations, Fiction
Science fiction
Reading Programs: Accelerated Reader Level: 5.2 , Points: 15.0
Lexile Level: 740
Reading Counts Level: 5.5 , Points: 23.0
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Young Adult Titles | 10/01/2013
New secrets await Adelice as she's pressured to use her powers to free Earth from the Guild's iron grip. Earth presents fresh mysteries as Adelice discovers the truth about her parents and finds unexpected comfort in Jost brother, Erik's, arms. Crewel world series, 400pp.
Journal Reviews
Booklist | 10/15/2013
Grades 7-10. "Oh, what a tangled web we weave." Albin's story of Adelice, the talented spinster of Crewel (2012), picks up right where it left off as she and the brothers Jost and Erik escape the controlled fibers of Arras for a hope of freedom on Earth. Turns out Earth is not abandoned, danger lurks everywhere in the form of Remnants who have been sent to hunt her down, and a foil for Cormac Patton awaits to exercise his own form of control and domination. The setting is a darker postapocalypse world than in the first installment, with interesting new developments and a host of new characters, whose secrets impact Adelice. Much of the world building unfolds in murky exposition, and it eventually takes Albert Einstein (seriously) to explain it. A tighter reweaving would make this a better book, but the continuing saga of the love triangle and another dramatic ending will leave fans of the series wanting more. Dobrez, Cindy. 400p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2013.
Horn Book Guide | 05/01/2014
4. In this sequel to Crewel, Jost, Erik, and Adelice continue their story. The three hope to create their own destiny, but Earth is barren and ruled by a power even stricter and more dangerous than the Guild of Arras. The love triangle occasionally overwhelms the plot, but Albin's world continues to grow in new and twisted ways. jm. 390pg. THE HORN BOOK, c2014.
Kirkus Reviews | 10/01/2013
Creweler-to-be Adelice, her lover, Jost, and his brother, Erik, have fled Arras (Crewel, 2012) and seek to fight the Guild on Earth. Earth is divided between the Guild and its mining operations and the Sunrunners who control the solar-energy trade. In fairly short order, the trio meet Dante, a friendly Sunrunner, and are attacked by a band of Remnants--the living shells of humans left behind after a Spinster has "ripped" their souls. (Horrifyingly, one is what's left of Adelice's mother.) The plot thickens when Dante takes them to Kincaid, the megalomaniac at the top of the Sunrunner organization. (In a nice touch, his headquarters is Hearst Castle.) Relationships and alliances develop and shift at a dizzying rate. Most notable is the tiresomely predictable triangle among Adelice, Jost and Erik, but the bond Adelice discovers she shares with Dante calls her entire past into question. In dialogue, Adelice demonstrates spunk and a sense of humor, but unfortunately, this does not inform her flat, standard-issue-dystopian present-tense narration. Albin provides further background on the physics and history of Arras, but just exactly how Adelice is able to see and manipulate the raw strands of energy that form Earth's reality as well as the construct that is Arras are still left for readers to accept on faith, frustrating those who like science in their science fiction. For fans only, a bridge between Crewel and Book 3. (Dystopian romance. 12-16). 400pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2013.
School Library Journal | 12/01/2013
Gr 9 Up. In this sequel to Crewel (Farrar, 2012), Adelice, a talented 16-year-old Spinster, leaves behind her life in Arras, along with brothers Jost and Erik, for the damaged Earth. There, she finds that her ability to weave the threads of life together is thwarted. She discovers gifted men called Tailors--beings who are able to alter and piece together the fabrics of individual lives. Erik hides the fact that he is a skilled Tailor, and Adelice is one of the rarest beings: both Spinster and Tailor. The story is about survival and romance (Adelice is drawn to both Jost and Erik). As the heroine's feelings intensify, she challenges the idea that Spinsters who consummate a romance will lose their ability to weave. Albin aptly weaves her unique vocabulary into the complex plot. Adelice fights the Guild, the powerful leaders of Arras, and the Remnants, soulless former humans, and struggles to understand herself and her abilities. "How can I discover who I am when my world is built of secrets and shadows?" she asks herself. The loose ends involving Adelice's family and a world-saving creation called "The Whorl" will leave fans waiting eagerly for book three. Altered is a mix of romance and adventure that will be most enjoyable for readers of the first novel. Maggie Knapp, Trinity Valley School, Fort Worth, TX. 400p. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
~VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates Magazine - Retired Journal) | 02/01/2014
2Q 2P J S. This sequel to Crewel (Macmillan, 2012/VOYA October 2012) takes Adelice's story from Arras to Earth, to where she has escaped in hopes of living a life free of the Guild. Surprised by what she discovers on Earth, Adelice uncovers more about Arras then she had ever known and dark family secrets begin to unfurl. The love triangle continues among Adelice, Jost, and Erik but the dynamics shift as the world and truths they had come to know unravel. Major decisions involving her skill as a creweler--the gift that Adelice was taught to hide her whole life and which is more powerful than she ever realized--play a significant role in the fate of two worlds. A heartbreaking turn at the end leaves this story prime for a dramatic conclusion. Altered suffers from many of the same problems as Crewel; the language flow is unnatural, while the love triangle and major conflicts remain unoriginal and call to mind too many other works of dystopian and science fiction literature. Additionally, the premise and flow of Altered feel significantly distant from its predecessor. Readers who enjoyed Crewel may be disappointed in how distant this book feels. As with Crewel, this is a book that can be skipped, as superior dystopian and science fiction literature for young adults are easily accessible.--Shana Morales. 400p. VOICE OF YOUTH ADVOCATES, c2014.
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