Cinder

Cinder
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 5 (1)

The Lunar Chronicles, Book 1

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2012

Lexile Score

790

Reading Level

3-4

ATOS

5.8

Interest Level

6-12(MG+)

نویسنده

Marissa Meyer

ناشر

Feiwel & Friends

شابک

9781466800113
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

DOGO Books
candyexpress - This book is sooooooooo good. You might think, "Ummm....I think I'll go with a more adventurous book, I don't think a book about fairy tales is my type." Just because it's based on Cinderella does NOT mean it's girly. It is totally exciting with a mix of sci-fi in it. It is totally amazing and the end is really awesome. It's about a cyborg named Cinder. (BTW: A cyborg is like a regular human with some robotic parts.) Cinder was adopted by the father. The father soon died shortly after adopting Cinder. Years passed and things haven't really changed: Adri and Pearl, Cinder's stepmother and stepsister hate her, and Cinder's other stepsister, Peony, adores her. Then one day something horrible happens. I won't write or say anything about it because, then there would be no point of you reading the book and that's what I want you guys to do. So, instead I'll just tell you that it has something that has to do with Peony. After the tragic event, life goes on painfully for Cinder. That's when Cinder is visited by the prince of New Beijing: Prince Kai. Prince Kai has a problem with his android (like a phone) and asks Cinder to fix it. Cinder is an extremely well known mechanic who is like AMAZING at fixing stuff. Meanwhile, Prince Kai becomes Emperor Kai after the death of his father due to a fatal disease, letumosis. And it is most certainly the wrongest time for the wise emperor to die because the group of citizens on the rocky moon, Lunars, are threatening war against Earth unless Emperor Kai agrees to marry the queen of Luna in exchange for an antiode for lutmosis (Yes, the Lunars have a CURE!!!) and a peace treaty between Beijing and Luna. Of course there's always the catch when you make a deal with a queen like the queen of Luna. Queen Levana is known for a bloody history of making her way to the throne: She killed her older sister Queen Channery and to prevent her younger niece Princess Selene Blackburn from becoming queen, she set a fire off in the nursery of Princess Selene's. Of course charred skin was found but the body of the princess was never found.......... While the country is in danger of the possibilities Queen Levana might throw on the kingdom, Cinder untangles a knot of her past and must make decisions for the future that might cost the lives of everyone on Earth and Luna.

Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from November 7, 2011
First in the Lunar Chronicles series, this futuristic twist on Cinderella retains just enough of the original that readers will enjoy spotting the subtle similarities. But debut author Meyer’s brilliance is in sending the story into an entirely new, utterly thrilling dimension. Cinder is a talented teenage mechanic and cyborg—part human, part robot—who has been living in New Beijing with a demanding adoptive mother and two stepsisters, ever since her late stepfather took Cinder in after a hovercraft accident. Several events abruptly turn Cinder’s world upside down: a chance meeting with the handsome Prince Kai has her heart racing; a plague pandemic threatens her beloved sister Peony; Cinder learns she is immune to the plague; and the evil Lunar Queen Levana arrives on Earth, scheming to marry Kai. Though foreshadowing early on makes it fairly clear where the story is headed, it unfolds with the magic of a fairy tale and the breakneck excitement of dystopian fiction. Meyer’s far-future Earth is richly imagined, full of prejudice and intrigue, characters easy to get invested in, and hints of what might await in future books. Ages 12–up.



Kirkus

November 15, 2011
Although it packs in more genres than comfortably fit, this series opener and debut offers a high coolness factor by rewriting Cinderella as a kickass mechanic in a plague-ridden future. Long after World War IV, with a plague called letumosis ravaging all six Earthen countries, teenage Cinder spends her days in New Beijing doing mechanical repairs to earn money for her selfish adoptive mother. Her two sisters will attend Prince Kai's ball wearing elegant gowns; Cinder, hated because she's a cyborg, won't be going. But then the heart-thumpingly cute prince approaches Cinder's business booth as a customer, starting a chain of events that links her inextricably with the prince and with a palace doctor who's researching letumosis vaccines. This doctor drafts cyborgs as expendable test subjects; none survive. Cinder's personal tenacity and skill, as well as Meyer's deft application of "Cinderella" nuggets--Cinder's ill-fitting prosthetic foot (loseable on palace steps); a rusting, obsolete car colored pumpkin-orange--are riveting. Diluting them is a space-fantasy theme about mind-controlling Lunars from the moon, which unfortunately becomes the central plot. A connection between Cinder's forgotten childhood and wicked Lunar Queen Levana is predictable from early on. Despite the simplistic and incongruous-feeling telepathic-enslaver theme, readers will return for the next installment in this sharp, futuristic "Cinderella" tale. (Science fiction/fairy tale. 12-15)

(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)



School Library Journal

January 1, 2012

Gr 7-10-This re-imagined fairy tale, the first of a quartet, is neither imaginative nor compelling enough to keep readers involved in the detailed plot. In New Beijing of the Eastern Commonwealth, citizens are plagued by a deadly disease called lutumosis and are in constant danger of being obliterated by a moon-dwelling population called the lunars. Cinder is a human with surgically implanted robot parts who lives with her stepmother, two stepsisters, and an android named Iko. She slaves away as a mechanic, working hard to fix robots, hovercrafts, and netscreens. One day a hooded stranger walks into her booth at the marketplace with a broken android. To her shock, it is Prince Kai. The teen is flustered by the handsome young man who is soon to be emperor but manages to hide her mechanical arm and foot, which would reveal that she is a lowly cyborg, and agrees to help him. Meanwhile her stepsisters, Pearl and Peony, are readying themselves for the ball, intended to help Prince Kai find a princess. After Peony becomes afflicted with lutumosis and is taken to quarantine, Cinder's stepmother volunteers her hated stepdaughter for research in a desperate attempt to save her. With the help of a strange yet kindly doctor, Cinder learns a shocking secret about her past that could help save Prince Kai's empire, if only she can figure out what it means. The author's skilled, concise writing style cannot save this lackluster tale that has way too obvious secrets. Die-hard retold fairy-tale lovers who are also fans of future worlds such as that in Scott Westerfeld's "Uglies" series (S & S) might enjoy this one, but otherwise it is an additional purchase.-Tara Kehoe, Plainsboro Public Library, NJ

Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

October 15, 2011
Grades 7-10 There's a lot of moving parts in this fresh spin on Cinderella, the first in a four-book series. First, we've moved from a fairy-tale kingdom to a postWorld War IV future in New Beijing. Plagued by her stepmother and shunned by society for being a cyborg, Cinder keeps her head down as the city's best mechanic until she catches the eye of the dashing Prince Kai. He's got matters of state to worry about, though, including an incurable plague and the ever-present threat of war from the moon-people, known as Lunars. The over-the-top, spiteful cruelty that dogs the heroine from all sides is a little too cartoonish to take seriously when retrofitted from fairy tale to science fiction, and it's best not to ponder things like why such a technologically advanced civilization would get into such a tizzy about a fancy-dress ball. Still, readers will enjoy lining up the touchstones from the old favorite, and Meyer brings a good deal of charm and cleverness to this entertaining, swiftly paced read.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)




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