The Sky Inside By Clare B. Dunkle
The ads had started running on midmorning television the summer after Martin's fourth birthday. "Wonder babies are here!" they announced... Never had the arrival of the stork brought such excitement. Overflowing with charm and intelligence, Wonder Babies were like nothing the suburb has seen before.
But that didn't turn out to be a good thing.
Martin lived in a perfect world. Every year a new generation of genetically-engineered children is shipped out to meet their parents. Every spring the residents of his town take down the snow they've stuck to their windows and put up flowers. Every morning his family gathers around their television and cotes, like everyone else, for whatever matter of national importance the president has on the table. Today, it is the color of his drapes. It's business as usual under the protective dome of Suburb HM1.
And it’s all about to come crashing down.
Because a stranger has come to take away all the little children, including Martin's sister, Cassie, and no one wants to talk about where she has gone. The way martin sees it, he has a choice. He can remain in the Dubious safety of HM1, with danger that no one wants to talk about lurking just beneath the surface, or he can actually break out of the suburb, into the mysterious land outside, rumoured to be nothing but blowing sand for miles upon miles.
I find it fascinating that a librarian can write a book with such loose characters and writing that it seems like her first book. When in reality it is her 5th out of 7. The first three being a trilogy about Kate and Emily who went to live at Hallow Hill and have no idea of the lands dreadful heritage. Until, that is, Marak decides to tell them himself. Intelligent, pleasant, and completely pitiless, Marak is a powerful magician who claims to be a King and he has very specific plans for the two new girls who have trespassed into his kingdom (winner of the 2004 Mythopoeic fantasy Awards for children's literature.)
And yet the only thing that kept me reading "The Sky Inside" was the need to know what happens in the end. Other than that the writing is very basic, the story we've all heard before. At least she doesn't spoil the ending for you or end it like "The Giver"
shudders
PROLOGUE
The big television cameras of the You’ve Been Caught Napping game show prowled in the darkness at the edge of the set, their lenses focused on the old man’s face. Mindlessly thorough, they relayed to viewers his iron grey hair, his thick bifocals, and the trickles of sweat that wandered down tracks of wrinkles into his eyes. A thoughtful viewer might have wondered why he didn’t wipe the sweat away. But behind the silver podium that displayed a very high score, his hands lay trapped in a pair of strong plastic manacles. That was something those cameras couldn’t see.
“You’re right again, Dr. Church! You are simply amazing.” The handsome host beamed at the old man, white teeth flashing in a tanned face. “That completes the round. What will our contestant do next? Will he take home his winnings?” The audience groaned. “Or will he try to double them with our special bonus quiz?”
The audience shouted and cheered. This was odd because no audience was there. Beyond the banks of garish lights, the cavernous studio was empty.
“It’s a big decision,” said the host. “He needs to think it over, and that gives us time for a commercial break. We’ll be back with Dr. Rudolph Church right after this!”
The lively notes of a familiar advertising tune cut through the studio, and the wildly cheering audience hushed with the flick of a switch. The old man rested his head on the podium in front of him, the one that hid their nasty secret. After all, game shows were rollicking good fun, entertainment for the whole family. Imagine how viewers would feel if they saw the hypodermic needle inserted in his arm.
Meanwhile, in a comfortable living room, two of those viewers were fighting over the remote. The bigger one snatched it away and triumphantly changed the channel, and a buzzing squadron of red motor scooters charged across the screen.
“Martin, you jerk!” said the girl, flopping back onto the sofa. “You always watch these silly races! I wanted to see the rest of that.”
“Mom says no game shows,” Martin said smugly. “Plus, that one’s stupid. ‘Who wrote this?’ ‘What’s the term for that?’ It’s as bad as school.”
“I like it,” Cassie said. “It teaches me things. And this contestant is amazing. He hasn’t been sent off in nine straight shows.”
“Big hairy deal,” Martin said, leaning forward to grab her bag of chips. “Who cares what happens to one old man?”
Books you will also enjoy with the same theme:
The Chrysalids
Uglies
The Giver
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