Extras
Uglies
.

Welcome to Education by Design's Online store. We have brought to you a selection of products like Books : Extras Uglies along with it's reviews, pictures and related products. All sales from these pages goes towards the creation and maintenance of our educational online activities, articles and resources. We have over 40,000 online stories submitted by kids around the world.

Books: Extras  Uglies

Extras Uglies

Normal Price:$16.99
Our Price:$11.55
Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours

... For more information or Buy from Amazon.com ...


Manufacturer: Simon Pulse
Author: Scott Westerfeld
Binding: Hardcover
Publication Date: 2007-10-02
Publisher: Simon Pulse
Label: Simon Pulse
Number Of Pages: 432

NEW!!
Enjoy drawing this product with our drawing board.
Drawing Activity for this product
Features for Extras Uglies :

Small Picture
Medium Picture

Editorial Review

Fame

It's a few years after rebel Tally Youngblood took down the uglies/pretties/specials regime. Without those strict roles and rules, the world is in a complete cultural renaissance. "Tech-heads" flaunt their latest gadgets, "kickers" spread gossip and trends, and "surge monkeys" are hooked on extreme plastic surgery. And it's all monitored on a bazillion different cameras. The world is like a gigantic game of American Idol. Whoever is getting the most buzz gets the most votes. Popularity rules.

As if being fifteen doesn't suck enough, Aya Fuse's rank of 451,369 is so low, she's a total nobody. An extra. But Aya doesn't care; she just wants to lie low with her drone, Moggle. And maybe kick a good story for herself.

Then Aya meets a clique of girls who pull crazy tricks, yet are deeply secretive of it. Aya wants desperately to kick their story, to show everyone how intensely cool the Sly Girls are. But doing so would propel her out of extra-land and into the world of fame, celebrity...and extreme danger. A world she's not prepared for.
Cached date: AWS Called=true

Similar Products
Customer Reviews

A new twist to the series 2008-06-15
This is a new book to the series, but it is not about the same characters. It is based in the same world, but a different area that is focused on pop culture. A nice addition to the series, but don't expect it to focus on Tally.


A knockout coda 2008-06-03
The uglies series was one of the best fantasy trilogies of the new millennium, and the follow-up Extras does anything but disappoint.

This book stars newcomer Aya instead of previous protagonist, Tally Youngblood. However Tally lovers don't fret, for this new world has far from forgotten the wonderful woman. Any lives in a society in Japan that revolves around one thing, popularity. Her life and world is thought-provoking in a way both similar and different then Tally's. She doesn't have to worry about becoming a Pretty or fighting the Specials, she has to deal with a society, and a face-rank, designed to keep the socialites up and the "extras" down.

Her world so very eerily much like our own, is a wonderful "what if" of how our world could turn out. Going off of Scott Westerfeld's spectacular dystopia future, this book explores the very dark questions of fame and those who would want it.


Perfect addition 2008-06-02
After the brain-missing book that was Specials I was hesitant to pick this book up. I'm really glad I did! I think Westerfeld made himself icy again. I'm kicking this book for sure. Special Tally was bogus, I liked this new cast.

Best part from the book that had me rolling: Frizz in the hovercar with the Cutters and Aya when they don't know he has the Radical Honesty surge. Hilarious stuff.



Disappointing 2008-05-22
I am such a huge fan of the Uglies trilogy... but now, I guess, it's not really a trilogy. I'll admit that I had high expectations for this book, even though I ws aware that Scott Westerfeld, the author, had probably only written it because the trilogy had been a New York Times bestseller, so he knew that another book would sell out. Well, I'll tell you now that whenever you come upon one of these "add-ons" as I like to call them, its best that you avoid it and pretend that you never saw it. This is because the book is only made for money, not for the story itself, like the original books most likely were. Anyway, this book isn't even really about beloved Tally and Shay, but a group of people living somewhere assumably in Asia. The plot is just very far-fetched, and not as magnificent as its predecessors. This book should be left alone just like other add-ons.


Not Extra at All 2008-05-22
Scott Westerfeld has written yet another book; called Extras, in the Uglies trilogy (technically a series). A fantastic read for witty teenagers, Extras relates to present society's desire for fame.

This fiction book in the future is about a fifteen year old girl named Aya Fuse. The world has settled since Prettytime and is now run by the fame system. The more you're known, the better you live. Aya has an embarrassing face rank until she finds a story about a mysterious clique that attempts dangerous stunts. It's a story that could change everything. If able to kick it, Aya could go from nobody to the biggest somebody. However, nothing is really that easy. Aya must face obstacles and might discover that there's more to the story than what meets the eye. Danger... You'll have to read to see how Aya solves her problems. The story moves along and hits intriguing life lessons.

I would recommend this book to people who like adventure, suspense, heroic women, friendship, and a little tender romance. Westerfeld did a great job relating some of the events to today's society. He throws in events that you wouldn't expect to happen then leaves you hanging on wanting more. Before long, you can't put the book down. The friends stick together creating an inspiration to be a better person. I will assure you, Extras is not extra at all.



... 2008-07-19
The newest book in the Uglies series, this one takes place in Japan a few years after Tally has freed the planet from the mind control it was under. This book follows Aya Fuse, a kicker in Japan. Since the mind rain, Japan has leapt into advancing itself in as many ways as possible to make up for the fact that for 3 centuries there was very little advancement. They are set up on a system of popularity, the more popular you are; the better everything you have is. Thus we have different groups: Kickers look for new stories to report, to kick. Tech-heads: people that made new technologies and showed them off. Surge-monkeys: People that liked to change the way they looked constantly. Reputation Bombers: Cliques that would chant a member's name as much as possible to get the member's number up. NeoFoodies: Those that made up new food and new ways of eating them. The more you are paid attention to, the higher your number goes.

Aya is doing a story on a new group, one that wants to stay under the radar: the Sly Girls. Aya saw them mag-lev riding on the trains one night and wants to find out more about them. To do so, she becomes a part of the group and uncovers something a lot bigger then a group of girls doing tricks. It looks like a group of people are using the old hollowed out mountains that were made to protect world leaders, to bulid something. Something that looks an awful lot like missiles the Rusties had in their time.

I like this series, it's interesting and I look forward to seeing if there's going to be more.


the extra book in the series 2008-07-05
What happens after everything you take for granted in the world completely changes forever? Lots of ideas come forth and are explored.

It's now a few years after Tally Youngblood brought about the end of the Prettytime. Half a world away from Tally's city, Aya's city is full of people bent on fame. Everyone's fame is constantly measured, and everyone is always acutely aware of their relative fame. Aya is 15, a nobody with a low face rank, who is intent on being at least as famous as her older brother. To achieve fame, she is what amounts to a citizen journalist: reporting on interesting things that she sees in her life, hoping that others will read and link to it.

Aya observes an elusive and secretive clique of girls called the Sly Girls. They pull hair-raising tricks which no-one else does. Aya wants to report their story, and so convinces them to let her join. In the process of one of their tricks, they discover a huge secret. In the process, Aya's true goal is uncovered. The Sly Girls agree that the secret they have discovered is too important to keep hidden, so allow Aya to report it while they go underground. Aya reports it, and is instantly famous. Her reporting draws the attention of the now-undercover Tally. Aya and Tally join up, and learn the true secret behind what Aya has observed.

With Tally as a secondary character, she becomes a lot less sympathetic -- seen from the outside, she's rude, harsh, and needlessly violent. Aya can see some of Tally's struggles, but obviously most of that occurs only within Tally's own head. The novel is an interesting discussion of the perils of fame and those who seek it. I didn't find this book quite as engrossing as the previous books set in this universe, but I still devoured it.


A little more Uglies... 2008-07-02
Fourth in the Uglies "trilogy."

It has been several years after Tally Youngblood changed the world and ended prettytime forever. The beauty standards are no longer mandates. Though many people still opt to have surge, it is now a choice.

Aya Fuse is a 15-year-old ugly, too young for surge and too much of a nobody to have a satisfying face-rank. Aya's city operates on a reputation economy, which is based on face-rank (popularity). Everyone has their own feed. More viewers equals more votes equals a better face-rank. Aya dreams of becoming famous as a "kicker," someone who reports gossip and trends, but rarely serious news.

When Aya meets a clique of girls who pull crazy tricks, but are determined to keep their group a secret, she decides to kick their story. Hanging out with the Sly Girls leads Aya to a story that becomes bigger and more dangerous than she could have imagined.


A Search for Fame (and Other Things) 2008-06-27
This, the fourth book in the Uglies trilogy, is in some ways better than the original series, as it provides a fresh viewpoint and new characters to look at the Pretties world after Tally Youngblood's radical revolution.

Aya is a 15 year old in a Japanese city, a city which has re-organized its economy around the idea of fame, or face-rank as called here. As a near faceless extra, with a face rank down in the 400,000's, Aya is driven to find a news story that will propel her to fame as one of the best `kickers' (equivalent to an investigative journalist) around. Accidentally observing a shadowy clique known as the Sly Girls, who for reasons of their own actively avoid fame, doing something both dangerous and fun, she decides that doing a story about this group will be a decidedly great way to help her in her quest to become something other than a nonentity. But the story of the Sly Girls leads her to a much larger story, one with potentially deadly consequences for the entire world, and one which will eventually attract the attention of the person with the #1 face-rank, Tally Youngblood, while at the same time involve Aya in the moral and ethical quandaries that journalism sometimes leads to.

The plot line is good, leading to some very unexpected corners of the world, and Aya is well drawn. The new society portrayed here makes an interesting contrast to that of the mind-hobbled Pretties, as without those mental limitations this new world shows a vibrancy of many different people heading off in all directions, from tech geek-hood to obsessive gossip-generating stunts. There's even some sly satire about things like how some people try to improve their Google rank today with a group in Aya's world who try to artificially boost someone's face rank by mentioned that person's name again and again.

The above is all good, but I found a few things that nagged. There are some technical bobbles, which are difficult to detail without giving away the plot, but I'll give one example. When you accelerate a multi-ton piece of steel to orbital escape velocity in an air-evacuated tunnel, then launch it up into the air, the result will be a very loud bang, hearable for miles around, and this thunder will continue following the projectile for a very long way. This is not good if you are trying to conceal the launch of such a projectile, especially if you are launching hundreds of these objects. There are some plausibility issues with the methods and aims of what turns out to be the `villain' of this story. And once again, as with the original Pretties world, I found that the economic underpinnings of the portrayed society to be too skimpily described and worked-out to make me fully believe in it. These are quibbles, and many readers probably won't notice them amongst the fast action and all the new surprises this book has.

A good follow-up to the original series, with some fresh and original ideas and characters, well worth reading for those who read the first three books.

--- Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd (hyperpat)



Twist in the series 2008-06-18
I love this author. I have read all of the books in the series and some that aren't in the series. The author has a very creative view of life.
This book is a refreshing new twist on the series. I read a lot of books so when i haven't read a book in a while it's hard for me to remember where i left off, but this book is from i new point of view with only some points from the paso. It was really easy to get into the book fast. Though it did have references to the past books but those were main parts in the old books so it was easy to follow along.
So definitely read this book if you haven't, it is wonderful and teaches a very good lesson.

... For more information from Amazon.com about Extras Uglies ...
null
In association with Amazon.com. Please support our site by doing your online shopping here.
Search