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Specials (Uglies)
Specials (Uglies)

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Author: Scott Westerfeld
Creator: Rodrigo Corral
Publisher: Simon Pulse
Category: Book

Buy New: $10.37



New (6) Used (12) from $8.50

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 87 reviews
Sales Rank: 97690

Format: Bargain Price
Media: Paperback
Reading Level: Young Adult
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 400
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1
Dimensions (in): 7 x 5 x 1.2

ASIN: B00139YHL0

Publication Date: September 11, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new! Beautifu!! May have a small remainder mark (ink mark) along the edge. gift quality, crisp, clean, multiple copies available, prompt shipping, excellent service.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Specials (Uglies)
  • Hardcover - Specials (Uglies Trilogy, Book 3)
  • Hardcover - Specials (Thorndike Press Large Print Literacy Bridge Series)
  • Library Binding - Specials (Uglies)
  • Paperback - Specials (Uglies Quartet)
  • Audio Download - Specials (Unabridged)
  • Library Binding - Specials (Uglies)

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  • Midnighters #1: The Secret Hour (Midnighters)

Customer Reviews:   Read 82 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Specials   June 24, 2006
 52 out of 58 found this review helpful

The Uglies trilogy is truly unique science fiction, and it holds that mold all the way to the end. Uglies was great, Pretties was interesting but dropped a little, and Specials, the finale, is brilliant.

We last left Tally just as she's being forced into another operation- this one to turn her into a "Special", part of Dr. Cable's team of cruel pretties with wolfen eyes, flash tattoos, inhuman reflexes and razor teeth and fingernails. Tally thinks that she sees the world clearly as a Special- the New Smoke, which has been growing everyday, is a problem that needs to be fixed, starting with getting rid of one of their leaders and her old boyfriend David.

But before Tally can settle into the life of a Special, she wants Zane back. She is dismayed to find that he was permanently damaged from Maddy's nano-eating pills, and that with her Special eyes she can't even bring herself to look at him. She wants him to join her as a Special- and to do that he has to prove himself "bubbly". And what better way to do it by escaping the city? With help from Tally and Shay, Zane and a group of his Crims break into the wild to meet up with the New Smoke. What they don't know is that Tally and Shay are tracking them, waiting to find out where their enemies are.

Specials goes where Pretties and Uglies didn't. At times you forget who's good and bad, and what side you want to root for. Tally does plenty of wrong stuff, too- enough that maybe you don't even want to feel sympathetic for her. The end of the story ties up nicely and shows that there isn't really good and evil- everyone going to do something wrong, and then there are the people who stop them. Whether or not those people are good or bad is up to the reader to decide.



4 out of 5 stars Fascinating, but Hard to Identify with Tally in this Book   June 13, 2006
 44 out of 48 found this review helpful

Specials is the final book in Scott Westerfeld's Uglies trilogy (after Uglies and Pretties). In this installment, Tally wakes up from surgery and finds herself part of an ultra-cool team of Specials (bio-engineered, covert law enforcement personnel) called the Cutters. She has snazzy techno-features, like embedded computer chips, unbreakable ceramic bones, and razors that come out of her fingernails. She's the ultimate weapon.

It's a bit disturbing to read a book in which the heroine of the series has been essentially co-opted by the bad guys. Tally now works for Shay, her complex best friend, and is expected to find and betray the New Smokies (her friends of the first book). But she does maintain traces of her former self, and she is particularly motivated to find Zane (her now brain-damaged love from the second book), and convince Dr. Cable to transform Zane into a Special, too. However, when she does find Zane, she is revolted by his weakness, by his not being "special" like she is. She struggles with herself, knowing deep inside that she loves him, but programmed to see the world so keenly that his imperfections grate on her, and so sure of her own superiority that she can't really imagine being with him again.

A series of adventures follow, during which Tally and Shay pull a stunt that turns out to have disastrous consequences, and then set off on the trail of the New Smoke. Tally re-encounters David (her love from before she met Zane), and has to go up against the seemingly invincible Dr. Cable. The ending is satisfying in many ways, although the resolution of the Zane vs. David choice is a bit of an anti-climax.

Overall, I found it a fascinating story, full of unexpected twists, chases, and cool special effects. I think that the Westerfeld says some interesting things about what constitutes beauty, about making up your own mind vs. letting others tell you what to do, and about the balance between governmental protection and control. Tally's changing personality makes this series a bit tough, however, after the first book. You like her. You dislike her. You pity her. You don't know what to do with her. For me, I prefer to have a main character that I can identify with more. Tally's evolving personality makes that a bit difficult. I'm left feeling that Scott Westerfeld presents some intriguing ideas with this series, and that teens will enjoy it, but that I didn't love it the way I do when I identify with the main character. Still, it's a fun ride. And I'll definitely see the movies if there ever are any.

This book review was originally published on my blog, Jen Robinson's Book Page, on June 11th, 2006.



5 out of 5 stars The Breathtakingly beautiful end to the trilogy.   April 27, 2006
 37 out of 40 found this review helpful

'Tally- your special' Tally can still remember the haunting words of Shay's that have destroyed her life a pretty forever. Even the days when she was and Uglie- specials seemed like legendary figures, myths, something people talked about but never saw- Tally would never have guessed in her wildest-dreams that she would become one. And now she was.

Being a special, bring a new and beautiful aspect to the life of Tally. She feels abnormal, everything she sees has a simple and somewhat- crystallic beauty to it. Everything shimmers with loveliness and grace and beauty- life is unreal now, that Tallys a special.

Then Tally is given an offer- to stamp out the rebels of the New Smoke- once and for all- whether she does or whether she doesn't, darkness has crept into Tally's life- like a dangerous fume, like pure hatred from a bleeding heart. Whatever she chooses, Tally's life will never be the same now that she is a special.

The third and final book to this amazing trilogy had a beautiful shade of darkness to it. The characters were well-developed, personality changes occured, and the readers grow close to Tally like a weed entwining a fern that had gone from pretty and bonny- to breathtakingly beautiful with a hardness to it.

I have enjoyed reading Scott Westerfield's other books to the series: Uglies and then Pretties. The originality to both of them is wonderful and creative, and over-all adds up to a great teen read, that depicts an amazingly modern world- perhaps the future, for us humans.



5 out of 5 stars A thought-provoking and exciting end to the trilogy   June 21, 2006
 12 out of 16 found this review helpful

Tally is now a Cutter, a new branch of Special Circumstances. The Cutters, led by Tally's longtime friend Shay, arrive at an uglies party looking for outsiders crashing the festivities to stir up trouble. Tally and the other Cutters are disguised as uglies, which causes Tally to feel nostalgic as she watches the poor uglies awkwardly interacting.

Tally has been completely remade. Her bones are now aircraft ceramic, light but indestructible. Her muscles repair themselves. She can hear the faintest, most distant sound through her skintenna. All her senses are supernaturally sharp --- and she actually smells the party-crashing Smokey.

Smokies have been smuggling in pills with nanos, which destroy the brain lesions that keep pretties stupid and mellow. Unfortunately, the nanos can also destroy brains entirely (Tally has seen this firsthand when the pills destroyed her boyfriend Zane's mind). Now Tally moves to arrest the Smokey, who escapes by zooming up into the air by use of a bungee jacket. The fugitive is rescued by Smokies on hoverboards, including a leader Tally well remembers: David.

Immediately, Tally and the other Cutters are on their hoverboards in a thrilling race to capture the Smokies. An extra incentive drives Tally and Shay --- their personal vendettas against their mutual old boyfriend and now enemy, David. Even with the Cutters' many advantages, however, the Smokies shock them by retaliating in unexpected ways, ultimately leaving Shay and Tally to fight the outsiders in the most primitive manner. The Smokies have the advantage in the struggle, kidnapping Shay and another Cutter and stealing the Specials' hoverboards. Tally is alone and stranded in the forest until she recovers and is soon back on the hunt.

When Tally reunites with Shay and most of the other Cutters, she learns something astounding: The pills were to be delivered to one of the Crims, a troublemaking clique. That Crim is Zane, Tally's boyfriend. She is dumbfounded. Why hasn't Zane joined Tally if he's recovered?

Tally and Shay visit Zane, who is still a pretty. He is also not quite right and is still damaged from the pills. However, he's helping the Crims pass out thousands of pills, resulting in a new breed of intelligent pretties. Tally asks Zane to betray his Smokey allies, and he reluctantly agrees to do it for her.

While Tally still feels love for her boyfriend, she is also repelled by his disabilities. If she and Shay can help him escape, they'll all be in peril. Yet Zane may become a Special after he helps bring the Smokies down. Their mission begins with the most dangerous trick ever. Will Tally and Shay survive it --- and the consequences?

Packed with action in the face of relentless danger, the stakes continue to increase with each plot twist. During Tally's quest she discovers one surprise after another, but when she arrives at her destination, she's in for the most shocking revelation ever. This page-turner dishes up thought-provoking social commentary on government, cliques, humanity, appearance and redemption --- all wrapped up in a tremendous science fiction adventure --- and is a satisfying and triumphant conclusion to this extraordinary trilogy. Highly recommended.

--- Reviewed by Terry Miller Shannon



3 out of 5 stars Is this the end?!   December 27, 2006
 12 out of 18 found this review helpful

I am kind of holding onto hope that this is not the end of the story. This third book just didn't seem to tye it all together like the others did. I am a huge uglies fan(the second book being my favorite)and I felt so let down by the third. Here's why...
1. The whole thing with the smoke joining with the city didn't really work. I mean the whole point of the smoke was that they were this rebelious little group...you know, the smoke against the world. But then they join the city and all of a sudden they are these ruthless people living in a messed up city of wierdo's. I don't get it.
2. The whole Tally cutting herself thing was horrible. I was horrified when i first read about her doing this, Shay is one thing but Tally,well yeah. It may not have been so bad if the whole thing had been resolved, but like so much else in the book it seems like tally never fixes this problem. 3. The end did not work for me. I had always assumed that Tally would go back to pretty or maybe even ugly( although I really like her pretty). Instead she heads off into into the wild- still this vicous special. And i just don't really like the whole going off into the wild thing. Especially not with David. Now don't get me wrong, i like david. But what is the deal with them are they a couple or not? which leads me to my big complaint...

4. Scott really messed up his love triangle in this book. Actually his love square. I always loved the charachter of Zane, from the moment he appeared in the books, he added a great element of drama. I was also a David fan,just because he was always there and because he always added something to the plot. I had also always wondered about Shay, the fourth in the love square. Irritating as Shay could be she always managed to be the first one out there. I mean you can see Tallys whole journey reflected in what happened to Shay. So imagine my horror when there is almost no romance in this book. None. David is in maybe three scenes where he says and does nothing of value, and Zane while in more scenes, pretty much does nothing except shake and try to persuade Tally to fight her specials lesions. Shay however predominates over 2/3 of the book, yet still the big Shay& Tally conflict is not solved. At the end of the book they have not had the talking that needs to happen between them to remedy everything that happened. Its just like Shay suddenly woke up and forgave tally, which did not work for me. And now for my Zane rant. I do not mind so much that Zane was killed. It is the way that he was killed that horrified me. After being left out of most of the book he is suddenly killed in a bad operation. At this point you are not really even sure how much tally cares about the guy and it shows. For maybe half a page tally mourns Zane, then she is done with him. Occasionally, as if the author just remembered that he died we hear tally feel depressed about zane. Deeply depressed. But she never comes to terms with it!!! She is just left at the end of the book still struggling over his death, and there horrible last encounter. Then david pops up and everything is all fine and dandy with him. They were another one that needed a good long talk. It seemed like scott tried but he couldn't really pull it off. I always knew that tally would have to choose between zane and david, that one of them would probably have to die, and i always thought(to my deep distress) that it would be zane who scott would make kick the bucket. however the way he did it was so badly laid out that i am only left desperatly hoping that a fourth book might be written and zane might come back, or tally learn to deal with the loss by falling in love with david or something.
So i was pretty disapointed in this book. The plot line wasn't as good and this story just seemed all over the place.


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