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Pretties (Uglies Trilogy, Book 2) by Scott…
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Pretties (Uglies Trilogy, Book 2) (edition 2005)

by Scott Westerfeld (Author)

Series: Uglies (2)

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9,439281824 (3.82)1 / 229
ok. so on top of all the other stuff i have been reading lately, i became thoroughly engrossed in a series which has not let me down in the slightest. this is a bit long winded, but keep in mind it is in reference to reading three books.. and i am trying REALLY hard not to give away spoilers..

it is hard to write about this book because in the context of the review, the keywords and mannerisms of the characters society seems like nothing but grammar and spelling errors. bear with it though, in the books, you are so washed over with the word use and logic that it actually makes sense in the proper frame.

the Uglies trilogy (now a quadrilogy?) was very engrossing. Book one, Uglies, describes a world where there is no war. there is no famine, hatred, or turmoil. 200-300 years in the past over population, strip mining, clear cutting, genetic engineering of plants and animals laid waste on everything in the world. humans have rebuilt from the ashes after we destroyed ourselves. our generation is referred to as “the rusties” since everything left from our world is covered in rust and falling apart.

Tally Youngblood is 15 years old, and only months away from becoming one of the “pretties”. in this world, to remove all of the dangerous human habits of destruction, you are born and raised by your parents, once you hit a certain age (8 or 9 from what i could tell) you are shipped off to school as an ugly. at the age of 16 you are taken from school where you will be put under the knife and remade as a better person. your bones are ground down and or elongated, you have new muscle tissue added to your body, and you have full facial re-constructive surgery. all “pretties” have a choice on how they look, with in the guidelines of the governments rules of morphology. they effectively remove all extremes in height, hair color, skin color, etc. everyone is similar and there is no need for hatred.

Tally, in waiting for her 16th birthday meets a new friend, Shay, who has no desire to become one of the pretties. a week before their shared birthday/graduation from being uglies, Shay decides to run off to a rumored group of rebels who have shafted the system and stayed ugly, and foregone all efforts to work within the system. Tally however has no desire to join her friend and sticks around for her surge (surgery). her only desire is become pretty and join her friends in New Pretty town, where she can dance and play and enjoy the life she has been programmed to want since birth.

Unfortunately, Tally is roped into a game of social change. she is scooped up by the fearsome and dangerous police force that acts as bogeymen for the government. Special Circumstances (the Specials) only comes forward when needed, generally letting the local police force take care of everything. This being a “Special circumstance” Tally is forced to follow her friend to the encampment of rebels (the Smoke) and betray her friend, and everyone who has escaped so far. if she does not, she will be denies surge and will forever be Ugly. and in this society, this is the worst thing that could ever happen to you.

Book one was so good, that i had an itch to move on to book two immediately. i hate doing that. i love to stretch a series out if possible, and draw out the enjoyment from the story line. so when book one was finished, though i really wanted to move on to the second book, i ramped myself down and read the Real Ultimate Power: The Official Ninja book. Book two immediately followed and when finished i lost all self control and my fingers and eyes forced me to read book three next.. it took about two days with my schedule.. two lousy days.. why couldn’t it last longer… i wasted a great book by reading it too soon..

well, not a waste. damn. it was so good, i had no choice really.. it was in my best interest to read the book. or so i keep telling myself. there is a fourth book. it was written after the trilogy was announced, so it is a bit of an anomaly, thus the trilogy quadrilogy notation above. unfortunately, the book Extras is still in hardback edition, so until it hits paperback, i will have to force myself to wait.. this sucks..

these books, written by Scott Westerfeld, fall into the teen-fiction category. they are written for teens, but the story line and books themselves do not lend themselves only to teens. being thirty years old, i literally could not stop reading these books. if you need a good break from your normal reading schedule, i would throw these in the mix and read them. they all rank around 300 pages of single space small print, so they are not some little read you would use to sturdy the kitchen table. instead, they are full of vibrant ideas, technology, tattoos that i wish were a reality. there were no obvious plot twists that made me think “why am i reading this” or “how predictable” instead, i was often surprised and left feeling “bubbly” as they state in the book.

imagine a world full of barbie dolls being slowly destroyed by barbie’s cyber-punk kid sister that has been kept in the closet for years.

i was sad to come to the end of this series, but glad to know that i will have at least one more book to close it all up in the near future.

anyone who is interested should note that all three of the first books can be bought in a boxed set for under 20 bucks.. this is how i got sucked into them.. a really good price for a nice story line idea turned into one of the best purchases i have made on books in a while. now, i just have to hope that hollywood has not gotten their hands on the thought of movies. these would be thoroughly ruined and not done justice.. read them before someone fucks them up for you… thats all i have to say on the matter.
( )
  Toast.x2 | Jun 12, 2017 |
English (276)  Spanish (1)  Swedish (1)  Danish (1)  German (1)  Hungarian (1)  French (1)  All languages (282)
Showing 1-25 of 276 (next | show all)
I was right about the worldbuilding expanding in future novels. I like how complex everything is getting, and how Tally is coming to understand that neither side is 100% right. I liked Tally and Zane's relationship, but the love triangle is a little meh. I will give it grace seeing how these books were published in 2005, long before certain famous books over did the love triangle.

There was some language used that I also wasn't a fan of. I will give it a partial pass, again because of when the novel was written, but since I'm reading original editions, I'm curious if the language was changed in future editions. ( )
  BarnesBookshelf | Mar 11, 2024 |
Dystopia
  BooksInMirror | Feb 19, 2024 |
A good continuation of the trilogy begun in [b:Uglies|24770|Uglies (Uglies, #1)|Scott Westerfeld|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1255574770s/24770.jpg|2895388]. I thought the pacing was a bit too slow even for me; I'm not sure how a real YA would react. (Audiobook note: The narrator's habit of having almost all the characters stre-e-e-e-etch out the first syllable of a sentence's first word is really beginning to annoy me. I'll almost certainly listen to the 3rd book, [b:Specials|968|The Da Vinci Code (Robert Langdon, #2)|Dan Brown|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1255581720s/968.jpg|2982101], but I'm not certain I'll be able to endure the narration all the way through. I might have to resort to print.] ( )
  Treebeard_404 | Jan 23, 2024 |
Well... can't say I didn't expect this after Uglies, but still anything like pretty-world is giving me shivers. It's like disgust slightly clouded by rationalization. It's something I can't really like no matter the reasons. And besides, level of selfdoubting in this book is through the roof for me. ( )
  WorkLastDay | Dec 17, 2023 |
Same comment as I gave to the first installment. This one was a quick and very entertaining read. Really loved the flip perspective from ugly to pretty! The pace was right on track and the new characters added a nice layer of depth to the narrative. Can't wait to read #3! :) ( )
  BreePye | Oct 6, 2023 |
I read the Uglies quartet back in middle school and absolutely adored them. I must have reread them at least twice, but I hadn't done so again in a while. I was at a library yesterday and saw Westerfeld and picked up Pretties to kill time. As is the case with all fast paced books, I had almost finished it by the time I left. This remains one of the strongest dystopian series I've read, and I daresay I've read a few.

The premise behind this world is that all kids have a surgery on their sixteenth birthday that beautifies them, and also obviously does something else--otherwise the new pretties wouldn't be running around with no cares in the world but partying and having fun.

One of the strongest aspects of Westerfeld's writing comes in his world making. Tally is one of the "new-pretties" and as such lives in New Pretty town and will until she's a middle pretty. There, the utmost care is taken with safety for the various completely dangerous activities that residents can partake in. Tally's clique, the Crims, engages in a stunt that melts a floating ice rink and sends them all crashing to the ground, but as they were all wearing bungee jackets, they were safe.

The plot is fast paced and action packed. As soon as we're finished hearing about the antics in New Pretty Town, Westerfeld throws us into drama and exciting events, and from there on, there's no stopping.

There's enough romance to satisfy me without distracting from the plot or making it a star, which is a refreshing balance.

For anyone into dystopias, this series is a must read. Just make sure you have all four books at your hands when you do so! ( )
  whakaora | Mar 5, 2023 |
2nd book as good as the first. I'm going to read one more! ( )
  kslade | Dec 8, 2022 |
The beginning of the book was difficult to get through, mostly because of the 'pretty' language. I understand what the author was going for, but it felt like a lack of imagination on his part. Bubbly-making, nervous-making, pretty-making, etc. was irritating and I do not think it added to the story itself. Take the language annoyance out and you have another good story. ( )
  ArcherKel | Aug 17, 2022 |
I hadn't realized how crucial David was to my enjoyment of the series until he was a non-entity in Pretties. Despite the fact that Zane is practically a carbon copy in every other way, I missed David's maturity and perspective to balance Tally's pretty worldview. Without him---and without much likelihood of seeing him play a significant role in the series again---I don't think I'll be continuing to read the books. ( )
  slimikin | Mar 27, 2022 |
Once again an interesting mix of scifi and social commentary.

Warning for self harm in the appropriately titled chapter Cutters mid book. ( )
  mutantpudding | Dec 26, 2021 |
Assessment booklet by the publisher.
  BLTSbraille | Oct 21, 2021 |
Tally has now been turned into a Special, engineered to keep the uglies down and the pretties stupid.
  BLTSbraille | Sep 27, 2021 |
Even more YA ( )
  codykh | Jun 28, 2021 |
This was good, though I may have liked Uglies better. I wasn't happy with the ending, though I figured that something like it had to happen. (Sometimes knowing the title of the sequel is not such a good thing.) ( )
  ssperson | Apr 3, 2021 |
This continues the 'Uglies' story; very well written, tautly plotted dysfunctional society book. ( )
  StephenKimber | Mar 5, 2021 |
I'm kind of sucked into the story, but I still feel a bit detached from the characters. I'm not sure if this is me or if it's something about the books. I will definitely finish the trilogy, but I'm kind of hoping for something more all the time... ( )
  RankkaApina | Feb 22, 2021 |
And by ok, I mean a quick read that kept my attention. I just really don't find myself connecting or sympathizing with Tally, and that makes it very difficult to get at all invested in her story even when I find myself loving the way the world around her unfolds. I'll definitely be reading [b:Specials|3|Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (Harry Potter, #1)|J.K. Rowling|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51VC8RPZA2L._SL75_.jpg|4640799] soon though. ( )
  bookbrig | Aug 5, 2020 |
Having everything is can sometimes make it seem like you have nothing. Addressing the superficial world, as we follow her into this next world. Slower than Uglies. ( )
  Sovranty | Jun 21, 2020 |
So, unlike the first book in the trilogy, this did not live up to my fond memories of it.

I think the main problem is the plot. Second instalments of trilogies often seem a bit difficult, and this isn't the first time I've read one where there's a giant disconnect between the first half and the second, such that it seems really jarring. That's exactly what happens here. The first half is about Tally's new life as a pretty, and struggling against it – and then the second half is practically the first book redux. Only, this time around she meets a "primitive tribe" which seems to serve purely as a vehicle for Westerfeld to ruminate on the violence and self-destructiveness he sees as inherent to human nature.

As I recall, the first book could be preachy too, but this one is even preachier. Tally is suddenly full of exposition and philosophical ramblings, and it's just... well, it doesn't appeal very much. The conclusion of this book is literally a re-run of the conclusion to the last book. I just don't think we, as the reader, made a lot of progress.

I also didn't care much at all for the love triangle, and I thought it was absurd that kissing Zane, and falling in love with Zane should improve Tally's clarity of thought. That makes no sense. But really, nothing about the brain damage inflicted on pretties nor the cure makes any sense, and I preferred the last book which didn't spend so much time dwelling on this nonsensical cure.

I'd also have liked to have seen more on the dynamic between Tally and Shay, and the sense of betrayal that Shay has every right to feel, honestly. Then the end of the book was far too rushed – considering that the romantic subplot about Tally and David was so central to the last book, in this one they reunite and break up again in what, thirty pages? and she's excessively nasty to him too? WHAT IS THIS. Maybe more time should have been spent on this, and less on camping in the woods.

So while it saddens me to give this book such a low star rating, I can't really justify giving it any higher. It was a fast read, which made it a nice change, but it just didn't hold up for me. ( )
  Jayeless | May 27, 2020 |
Tally is a Pretty now; all memory of her time as an Ugly erased or suppressed. But even as she shifts into the carefree, party-filled world of the Pretties, she gets the nagging feeling that there's something more she needs to be doing.

When she meets Zane, the head of a daredevil, rebellious clique called the Crims, Tally thinks that she may have uncovered a key. Zane is handsome, clever, and unafraid to break the rules, and more than that, he and the Crims have discovered a state of mind called "bubbly," which helps stave off the vapid mindset of the Pretty operation. With Zane's help, and her growing attraction for him, Tally begins to remember clues about the past, including the experimental nanos that could free her mind permanently.

But the dark Dr. Cable and Special Circumstances are still on her tail, determined to keep Tally from remembering David and the Smoke. Can Tally ever go back to what she chose to leave behind when she became Pretty? Or is the only thing to do to move forward?

Not quite as riveting as "Uglies," but with more character development and explanation of the bigger picture, "Pretties" is the ominous precursor to the final book in Tally's trilogy. ( )
  booksong | Mar 18, 2020 |
The second book in the series, following Tally Youngblood in her life as a New Pretty. ( )
  TAPearson | Feb 24, 2020 |
this one was kinda boring in retrospect of the first one, I hope specials is better. ( )
  hixxup79 | Feb 23, 2020 |
The main character seems very much "wrong place wrong time", I don't think she's strong enough to warrant a lead role. Still fascinated with the changes in society the book shows. ( )
  Linyarai | Feb 16, 2020 |
I hope to never hear the words "bubbly" and "bogus" again. ( )
  Kayla.Krantz | Feb 14, 2020 |
The Writing and Worldbuilding

It builds on the world Uglies established, expanding and giving insight into the behind the scenes of the society. I was annoyed with the whole ~love cures all~ thing, as well as aspects of the love triangle, as, at this point, they're very old tropes, but since this came out over ten years ago, before The Hunger Games even, I'll give it some free passes. The slight glorification of Zane's undernourishment and gaunt appearance wasn't okay, though. I understand why he was gaunt, but I don't understand why Tally thought it was attractive.

The Characters

Tally: My sister warned me that she is very annoying as a Pretty, but honestly, she wasn't really, and if she was, it wasn't for very long. She was just as proactive as she had been in book 1, and I still really liked her.

Zane: I'm not a fan of love triangles, but he was a super nice and I loved him. He was distinct from David and lovable in his own way.

Shay: I'm so sad my hyper, lovable Shay is gone forever :(

Fausto: I loved him! He wasn't super important, but he was funny and even in his few appearances, I got a good feel for his character.

Andrew Simpson Smith: My lovable caveman! ❤❤❤ I don't care that he's stereotypical and a sexist, I love him.

Conclusion

I read this in almost one sitting and in less than 24 hours, so I think they gives a general idea of how engrossed I was in this, and how much I generally really liked it, but I didn't totally love it or anything. To put it in pretty speech: It wasn't totally love-making (which sounds dirty, but I swear it isn't) ( )
  Faith_Murri | Dec 9, 2019 |
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