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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

With Eve and Adam, authors Katherine Applegate and Michael Grant team up for the first time since creating the bestselling Animorphs series to craft a thrilling, dual-point-of-view story.
In the beginning, there was an apple –
And then there was a car crash, a horrible injury, and a hospital. But before Evening Spiker's head clears a strange boy named Solo is rushing her to her mother's research facility. There, under the best care available, Eve is left alone to heal.
Just when Eve thinks she will die – not from her injuries, but from boredom—her mother gives her a special project: Create the perfect boy.
Using an amazingly detailed simulation, Eve starts building a boy from the ground up. Eve is creating Adam. And he will be just perfect . . . won't he?

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 27, 2012
      Eleventh-grader Evening Spiker (E.V. or Eve for short) has grown up with the wealth and privilege that go with being the only child of Terra Spiker, the stereotypically icy and no-nonsense CEO of Spiker Biopharmaceuticals. When Eve's leg is severed in an accident, the company clinic comes in handy, and when recovery gets to be a bore, there's the human simulation program to play withâEve's mother asks her to "design the perfect boy" with it. A young orderly, Solo, is easy on the eyes, but he also prods Eve to acknowledge truths she'd rather ignore, like how fast her reattached leg is healing. Solo knows a lot about Spiker, more than a guy who pushes the coffee cart ought to. Why? The husband-and-wife team of Grant and Applegate (the Ani-morphs series) knows how to keep the questions and the action coming as they alternate (mostly) between Eve and Solo's perspectives. Observant, smart, and unencumbered by emotion, this is a tasty read that readers will devour in a flash. Lucky for them, there's a sequel planned. Ages 13âup.

    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2012
      The husband-wife team behind the Animorphs series returns with the first installment of an entertaining saga that pits smart teens against high-tech evildoers and bionic skullduggery. A run-in with a streetcar left Evening Spiker's body seriously mangled. Against medical advice, her widowed mother, Terra, insists on moving her from the hospital to Spiker Biopharmaceuticals, the cutting-edge biotech company she owns, renowned for its worldwide medical good works. Assisting Terra--though with an agenda of his own--is Solo Plissken, who takes more than a passing interest in Eve. Both teens feel a deep ambivalence toward Terra and Spiker Biopharm, though for different reasons, and beyond their mutual attraction, share a troubling, mysterious connection from the past. Eve's healing is strangely swift but leaves her bored and restless until Terra drops a project, billed as genetics education, in her lap: Design a virtual human being from scratch. With help from her feisty, reckless friend Aislin, Eve takes up the challenge. While she becomes increasingly mesmerized by her creation, Adam, Solo edges closer to achieving his own goals. The straightforward narration by Eve, Solo and Adam in compact, swift-moving prose, makes this a first-rate choice for reluctant readers while raising provocative questions about the nature of creation and perfection. An auspicious, thought-provoking series opener. (Science fiction/romance. 12 & up)

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      November 1, 2012

      Gr 7 Up-The accident was horrific. Seventeen-year-old Evening Spiker should have lost her leg, if not her life. But mere hours after being rushed to the hospital, her mother, the uber-powerful owner of Spiker Biopharmaceuticals, arranges for her to be transported to the SB Campus. Evening meets a mysterious boy named Solo, who fights his fascination with her even as he plots to destroy her mother, and she is given a fun assignment to do while she heals (at an unbelievably accelerated speed). It is to create the perfect guy-literally. Evening and Solo take turns narrating the story, along with Adam, her science project, and their voices ring absolutely true. Everything about this book is pitch-perfect: plot, characters, pace, everything. It is funny, thought-provoking, emotionally wrenching, romantic, and, above all, entertaining. It includes some violence, references to alcohol, drugs, and sex, but nothing overt. Ethical and moral questions abound and will spark spirited debate. It'll make 'em laugh. It'll make 'em think. You may want to buy multiples.Mara Alpert, Los Angeles Public Library

      Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2012
      Grades 7-10 Evening, the daughter of a powerful genetic-engineering visionary, is whisked from the hospital hours after surgeons reattach her leg following a traffic accident. While recovering at her mother's research facility, Spiker Biopharmaceuticals, Eve meets Solo, the orphaned son of Spiker's partners, who is collecting damaging information that could take down the whole corporation. Meanwhile, Eve is making some discoveries of her own. First, her leg is flawless mere days after being severed. Then there's her creation of Adam, a computer that simulates a man from the DNA up. Questions build into a late-night chase around Seattle, a clever rescue of Eve's troubled friend, and a dramatic and dangerous climax. Solo and Eve, who swap narration duties, have clearly differentiated voices, and when Adam appears in the flesh, he does as well. Too many logical leaps and unanswered questions about the Spiker program could be problematic for dedicated sf fans, but the blend of action and suspense will be welcoming for plenty of others. HIGH-DEMAND NOTE: Grant is behind the best-selling Gone series, and the husband-wife team cowrote the popular Animorphs series. That kind of pedigree moves books.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2013
      Seventeen-year-old Eve's mother has put her to work in her bio-research lab, designing "the perfect boy." This [cf2]is[cf1] just a simulation, right? The text is rife with apt allusions to [cf2]Frankenstein[cf1], the book of Genesis, Michelangelos [cf2]The Creation of Adam[cf1], and even [cf2]Pygmalion[cf1]; a love triangle element will keep readers engaged on a level beyond the scientific speculation.

      (Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:3.9
  • Lexile® Measure:560
  • Interest Level:6-12(MG+)
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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