What is happening to eighteen-year-old Jay and what is she changing into? How did she manage to lift a bus and what is the blue light that flows from her hands? Who is the boy being eaten alive by rats and why were the sick blocking the streets where she lived? Could she ever risk having children . . . knowing her mother had laid an egg? What was she really, this product of an unlawful genetic experiment? The Prime Minister of the UK and the Vice President of the USA know who she is. Twenty-years earlier, they created her parents in a secret lab. They had killed them and believed Jay to be dead. Now they must make sure of it, to protect themselves. The freak has to die!
This one started off pretty well, but about half way through the story line got disjointed and hectic. There were alot of loose ends left open or closed without any real cohesion. The "romance" in the book, was all sexually based and never deloped into any part of the story.
Overall, it was an OK book and even most teens would have not been to excited about. It seemed like through the whole book that it was written to sell as a movie.