Uglies (Uglies, #1)

English language

Published April 28, 2005

ISBN:
978-0-689-86538-1
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4 stars (15 reviews)

Tally is about to turn sixteen, and she can't wait. Not for her license -- for turning pretty. In Tally's world, your sixteenth birthday brings an operation that turns you from a repellent ugly into a stunningly attractive pretty and catapults you into a high-tech paradise where your only job is to have a really great time. In just a few weeks Tally will be there.

But Tally's new friend Shay isn't sure she wants to be pretty. She'd rather risk life on the outside. When Shay runs away, Tally learns about a whole new side of the pretty world -- and it isn't very pretty. The authorities offer Tally the worst choice she can imagine: find her friend and turn her in, or never turn pretty at all. The choice Tally makes changes her world forever. A very action-paced book; and a truly great read.

9 editions

Review of 'Uglies (Uglies, #1)' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Entertaining YA fiction that comes with all the usual tropes (female heroine, surprise love interest, love triangle) and none of the addictiveness of e.g. The Hunger Games or Divergent.

Tally is almost 16, the age when you turn from an Ugly to a Pretty through plastic surgery. On your 16th birthday you get whisked away for surgery to spend your life from thereon in New Pretty Town, partying and having fun. But then Tally meets a new friend, Shay, who doesn't follow everyone's dream and would rather run away from the city to remain Ugly and free. When she flees, the authorities get ahold of Tally and force her to follow her friend, or she will remain an Ugly her whole life...

I really wanted to find out how this all came to be, from the collapse of the life of the so-called Rusties to this life of plastic surgery …

Review of "Uglies: Shay's Story (Uglies: Graphic Novel, #1)" on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

It kept me entertained enough, but it's hardly a good book, so I can't in good faith recommend it. It tries to depict a dystopian world in which... well, you probably know the premise by now. But the world is too consumed with this one single feature. For a world situated centuries after the so-called "rusties", children there sure know a lot about us. More than I know of the life of people who lived in the 19th century, that's for sure. All it all, it just doesn't pass the bar for suspension of disbelief. The world is not coherent enough, it's too dependent on our point of view, so it remains one-dimensional, and since it is lacking in any insights on our own society, the whole thing becomes an exercise in futility.

I won't be reading the next books in the series.

Review of 'Uglies (Uglies, #1)' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I expected better writing I guess. The story itself is ok, the idea that a future generation only keep their children around while they are 'littlies' sending them off to a sort of boarding school when they become 'uglies' and then on their 16th birthday giving them life changing surgery to make them perfect and pretty is a great idea. The idea that some of the young teens want to rebel and the plot twist and secret they discover when they do...it's got the making of a great story but read more like a sell for a movie, maybe that's the trouble with YA fiction, everyone wants a movie, so less effort is put into the writing. The characters are not very rounded or deep, there is not much back story to anyone. It's a shame. Will I read the rest? Maybe if I see them in the library, I …

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