Scored
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
Set in the future when teenagers are monitored via camera and their recorded actions and confessions plugged into a computer program that determines their ability to succeed. All kids given a "score" that determines their future potential. This score has the ability to get kids into colleges, grant scholarships, or destroy all hope for the above. Scored's reluctant heroine is Imani, a girl whose high score is brought down when her best friend's score plummets. Where do you draw the line between doing what feels morally right and what can mean your future? Friendship, romance, loyalty, family, human connection and human value: all are questioned in this fresh and compelling dystopian novel set in the scarily forseeable future.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The concept behind McLaughlin's third novel is strong: a hypervigilant 1984-style society that assigns its citizens scores upon which their entire future depends. Imani LeMonde is a high school senior whose every action has been taken with that score in mind from the friends she makes to the grades she maintains and even the thoughts she has about "lowbies" and the "unscored," since Score Corp's cameras can read lips and analyze facial expressions. However, when her association with a rebellious childhood friend sends Imani's score plummeting, and an unscored classmate, Diego, wants to collaborate on a school project, she begins to question the system. McLaughlin (Cycler) tries hard to incorporate big themes into Imani's story: the power of individuals versus groups, injustice and oppression, the human tendency to follow authority. But the story bogs down when the author through Imani focuses too much on those issues instead of on building romantic tension between Imani and Diego, as well as her conflict with the manipulative school principal. The story feels more like a lecture in human psychology than a satisfying journey. Ages 12 up.
Customer Reviews
Mediocre Attempt at an Aristocratic Piece of Fiction
Scored demonstrates an interesting plot that caught my attention for the first tenth of the novel. The additional nine-tenths poorly demonstrated a lackluster attempt of teenage angst trying to overthrow an ill-designed system. The target market for this novel, which, in my opinion, is highly recommended for a teenage audience, is too complex for a teenage or young adult audience, as unnecessary slurs, cusses, and poorly placed words create a piece of fiction that fails to execute its main point. I would highly not recommend this book to anyone; not an entertaining read for any audience.