Bound To Stay Bound

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 How we became wicked
 Author: Yates, Alex

 Publisher:  Atheneum (2020)

 Classification: Fiction
 Physical Description: 368 p.,  22 cm

 BTSB No: 971831 ISBN: 9781481419840
 Ages: 14-18 Grades: 9-12

 Subjects:
 Science fiction
 Virus diseases -- Fiction
 Immunity -- Fiction
 Survival skills -- Fiction

Price: $10.65

Summary:
A viral disease called "the wickedness" plagues the world, and sixteen-year-olds Astrid and Natalie are two of the only people immune. The girls live in separate, isolated communities, but recent encounters with wicked people link their stories in unexpected ways.

Accelerated Reader Information:
   Interest Level: MG+
   Reading Level: 5.10
   Points: 12.0   Quiz: 508311



Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 06/01/2019 Gr 7 Up—Earth has met its apocalypse, and it involves insects. Mosquito-like hybrids carry the disease "wicked," and it spreads quickly. Victims gain a taste for violence, usually murdering their neighbors and family members with a childlike grin. Astrid has been raised in a glass-domed area, sheltered from the wicked, and protected by gallons of insecticide. When newcomers arrive in their encased town, they are asked The Question: What do you want? When asked repeatedly, those infected with wicked will invariably slip up and reveal their true intentions, like maybe seeing what you look like without skin. Astrid is uniquely immune to the disease. It was believed that if young children were exposed to the virus they would be "vexed," or immune. Unfortunately, this worked for only Astrid, and an entire generation of children, save two, died in the attempt, not to be replaced. Although her age-mate Hank did not die, he is not immune, and, like the other members of their community, must wear a bee suit whenever venturing out. Meanwhile, as Astrid and Hank delve into the history of the town, the lighthouse across the way springs to life, raising questions about possible other residents. This is a real page-turner, although jumps in perspective and time may prove problematic for reluctant readers. VERDICT Yates has spun a first-class sci-fi/horror story. The interactions with the wicked are truly macabre, but in the best way.—Leah Krippner, Harlem High School, Machesney Park, IL - Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

Booklist - 06/01/2019 *Starred Review* Astrid is one of only two teenagers in the settlement of Goldsport, a fact that's a touchy subject with a tragic explanation. Natalie lives on an island with just her grandfather, pregnant mother, and, until recently, her father. In this future, the world has been decimated by a disease called the wickedness, spread by glowing purple insects called Singers that leave the infected—the Wicked—at once supremely violent and eerily childlike. But Astrid and Natalie are part of an incalculably small portion of survivors: they are Vexed, immune to the disease and of great interest to the rest of the world. As these brave heroines adventure for their lives, they learn just what wicked really is. Yates (The Winter Place, 2015) manages to make Natalie’s infected grandfather far more sympathetic than many uninfected survivors, whose many shades of depravity make them no small threat. The vividly imagined and haunting landscape is not unlike the post-apocalypse world of The Walking Dead, in which communities struggle to govern themselves as they fend off both the infected but also fellow survivors in a lawless anarchy. A creative and philosophical take on a zombie-esque apocalypse with a perfectly executed final act twist. Promptly hand this one to lovers of smart, tense science fiction. - Copyright 2019 Booklist.

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