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Quicksilver (2013)

de R. J. Anderson

Sèrie: Ultraviolet (2)

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18216148,574 (3.89)12
To prevent the public from learning about Tori's unusual DNA, technology "geek" Tori and her adoptive parents move to a new town and change their names.
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Es mostren 1-5 de 16 (següent | mostra-les totes)
Full Review on NetGalley
( )
  AnaCarter | Feb 14, 2023 |
This book threw me for a loop; Major Plot-twist. I didn't see over half of this coming!

First off this book changes perspective immediately, shifting off Alison and onto Tori.

She's Just an ordinary alien girl who desperately wants her parents acceptance and approval. She was also kidnapped for 3 months by a psychotic scientist. Who wants to experiment and eventually dissect and kill her, no big deal. Tori, is now in a race against time to stop the evil scientist, once and for all.

Enter the monkey-wrench, by the name of Deckard. A cop turned P.I. who is hell bent on finding out the truth, no matter what the cost.

Edge of my seat I tell you, couldn't put it down if I tried. I didn't. ( )
  thebacklistbook | Apr 24, 2019 |
NOTE: Spoilers below for [b:Ultraviolet|8843789|Ultraviolet (Ultraviolet, #1)|R.J. Anderson|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1338688532s/8843789.jpg|13718670].

Tori Beaugrand's life is a composite of secrets. From her intellect to her emotions to her origin, nothing is safe to reveal. To anybody. Not her friends, new or old. Not her parents. Certainly not her enemies. And for a seventeen-year-old, Tori's attracted some interesting enemies. There's the obsessed ex-cop who wants to know what really happened when she disappeared months ago. There's the curious genetics lab who got a peek at her unearthly DNA. And of course there's Mathis, to whom she is an experiment, not a person.

Tori is alone. But by now, she's used to it.

She doesn't let things faze her, not even running for her life (maybe literally), restarting in a new town, choosing a new name. Then Sebastian Faraday materializes (quite literally) in her world again with a message: Tori's in danger. Again.

This book never stops moving. Not until I browsed other reviews did I realize that, like [b:Ultraviolet|8843789|Ultraviolet (Ultraviolet, #1)|R.J. Anderson|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1338688532s/8843789.jpg|13718670], the physical action takes awhile to pick up. Tension propels this book even when Tori is working at Value Foods or pushing her parents for permission to explore her engineering skills at the local "makerspace." The plot takes several unexpected turns but is always driven by credible character choices, and I love Tori for her inner insecurities and her desire to be seen for who she is even as she weaves constant lies to protect herself.

As a well-rounded secondary character, I also love Milo. That Ms. Anderson wrote him and Tori as friends, not a teen romance, and that the characters themselves acknowledge to each other the difference--I don't know that I've read a young adult novel that deals as well with the complexities of teenage sexuality and peer pressure. Tori's disdain for the phrase "just a friend" is refreshing and perfectly fits who she is as a young woman forced to pretend her way through life, desiring friendship more than she'll admit even to herself.

Then there's the return of Alison and Faraday. Wow. I love them, too, this time around (yes, even Faraday). So much is hinted at in Faraday's reactions, and I salute the author for not spelling it all out.

As for the Crazy Ending Twist ... the She's Not Really Going To--OMGOSH moment ... well, like [b:Ultraviolet|8843789|Ultraviolet (Ultraviolet, #1)|R.J. Anderson|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1338688532s/8843789.jpg|13718670], this book is brilliant. Is it extreme? A little out there? Nudging a toe against the suspension-of-disbelief line? Absolutely. But with a tamer (dare I say more plausible?) climax, this book wouldn't measure up to its prequel.

Speaking of the prequel, these two books must be read together (I recommend in order) for full appreciation. Not only do they tie off threads left loose by the other, but their themes also blend beautifully. Both Alison and Tori reach a point of helplessness with nothing left to do or give, and in that emptiness, from that emptiness, they are saved. Redemption (though never named as such) glimmers in both books, more brightly when they are considered side by side.

As for the ending, knowing Ms. Anderson doesn't intend to continue with these characters ... sigh. There's a lot still unexplored, a lot of fallout, including that of Faraday's unforgivable choice, which happens too late in the book. Way too late, because then the story is over. And again (see my review of [b:Ultraviolet|8843789|Ultraviolet (Ultraviolet, #1)|R.J. Anderson|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1338688532s/8843789.jpg|13718670]), I was not ready. Apparently, this author believes in limited closure.

Can I choose to be satisfied with that? Can I recommend these books anyway, especially to readers in search of young adult fiction that will bend genres and push boundaries and shatter formulas?

Sure thing. ( )
  AmandaGStevens | Mar 2, 2019 |
****MASSIVE SPOILERS FOR BOTH BOOKS IN THE SERIES, BECAUSE I AM GOING TO FANGIRL AND PROBABLY GIVE AWAY A LOT OF DETAILS. PROCEED AT YOUR OWN RISK.****

Okay, let me gush about Ultraviolet and Quicksilver for a bit, because this has literally everything I have ever wanted in a book, okay? I'm not even exaggerating. EVERYTHING.

1. Synaesthesia. This was so well portrayed -- probably the best I've seen in fiction.

Dramatic, yes. Confounded with other abilities and quirks, yes. But still so accurate and vivid. (Those tests Faraday gave Alison? I did those in a psych study once. Cue me geeking out all through that scene.)

2. Awesome, well-developed female leads.

I've got to say, I thought I wouldn't like Tori at first. Wow, was I ever wrong. She's probably one of my favourite main characters I've encountered in YA. (I also love Alison, but I did right from the start, so it wasn't as much of a surprise.)

3. The setting. I'm 99.9% sure that Quicksilver is set in the area I grew up, which is awesome (and Ultraviolet in Northern Ontario, which is awesome because when do you ever get sci fi set in Northern Ontario? Answer: not nearly enough).

4. The internet-schooling. This is the first Internet-schooler I've ever seen in fiction. And as someone who did almost all of her high school online, that makes me so. excited.

5. The sci-fi aspect. It was just really cool. I liked the explanation, I liked the technologies. Sci-fi is something that I usually prefer in TV shows to books for some reason, but the sci-fi here was great.

6. An amazing, canonical asexual character. I could gush about this for approximately forever (man, I wish I could post two reviews here because then I would definitely dedicate one to just the asexual aspects because I am SO THRILLED), but I'll restrain myself here.

But basically. The asexual aspect was done so well. And how it ended with the relationship thing? I'm so impressed.

Tori isn't a stereotypical asexual character. The book was respectful, and accurate, and fantastic.

TL;DR: This was AMAZING. RJ Anderson, you have earned my undying admiration. ( )
  bucketofrhymes | Dec 13, 2017 |
Best read closer to the first book in the series.
Tor is now Nikki and she and her family have moved and she's trying not to stand out and to find a lief for herself. It's complicated and messy and she just wants to live a life. To live she has to fight, using science. ( )
  wyvernfriend | Jun 24, 2017 |
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For Nick, who likes to make things
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On June 7, the year I turned sixteen, I vanished without a trace.
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To prevent the public from learning about Tori's unusual DNA, technology "geek" Tori and her adoptive parents move to a new town and change their names.

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R. J. Anderson és un autor/a de LibraryThing, un autor/a que afegeix la seva biblioteca personal a LibraryThing.

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