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No one has seen a Partial in eleven years. Eleven years ago the engineered soldiers, Partials, started a war that unleashed RM and completely desimated the human population. The human survivors have gathered together on Long Island and created a society determined not to become extinct.
Kira has no memory of her mother and barely remembers her father. When RM hit, she was 5. Wandering from home when she ran out of food after her father died until soldiers found her, she has grown up only knowing ...more
Kira has no memory of her mother and barely remembers her father. When RM hit, she was 5. Wandering from home when she ran out of food after her father died until soldiers found her, she has grown up only knowing ...more

Dan Wells doesn't normally write the type of fiction I'm interested in. I came to know of him through a podcast I listen to (Writing Excuses, with Brandon Sanderson and Howard Tayler). Only after hearing dozens of mentions of his John Cleaver books did I finally decide to read them, if only so I'd know what he was talking about. A story about a demon-fighting teenage sociopath? Hmm... But I was impressed—Wells has a deft hand with his characters, and really made me care about situations I wouldn
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First line:
"Newborn #485GA18M died on June 30, 2076 at 6:07 in the morning."
Another apocolyptic dystopian book with lots of twists and romance and government take over. The year is 2076. Most of humanity has been wiped off the earth thanks to man-made soldiers and a mysterious virus. There are no chlildren younger than fourteen because the virus kills babies within days. An edict handed down from the government, called the Hope Act, forces all women, eighteen years and older to become pregnant b ...more
"Newborn #485GA18M died on June 30, 2076 at 6:07 in the morning."
Another apocolyptic dystopian book with lots of twists and romance and government take over. The year is 2076. Most of humanity has been wiped off the earth thanks to man-made soldiers and a mysterious virus. There are no chlildren younger than fourteen because the virus kills babies within days. An edict handed down from the government, called the Hope Act, forces all women, eighteen years and older to become pregnant b ...more

I devoured this book in a single afternoon, artfully dodging the protestations and attention-getting schemes of my family members. Wells creates a post-apocalyptic/dystopian world that you can tell he's really explored mentally. The details are amazing and at times heart-wrenching, like when characters choose a music mix to listen to by calling out the inscriptions written out to an ipod's long-dead owners. The little touches of humanity show how much has changed, and yet how these characters ar
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I thought I'd rate this book more harshly than I did. The opening was a bit shaky, and it was my impression that it was padded. But, as the story wore on, the issues dropped off, and the pacing picked up. I also got a fuller picture of the intricacy of the future dystopia Dan Wells has written. I started off unimpressed, and am glad I gave the book a chance to change my mind.
Partials is the first in a trilogy about a future where humanity's remains huddle on Long Island, hoping for a cure for th ...more
Partials is the first in a trilogy about a future where humanity's remains huddle on Long Island, hoping for a cure for th ...more

This is a great book. Check out Steve's review on Elitist Book Reviews. That pretty much sums it up for me.
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Feb 04, 2013
Reece
marked it as to-read

Feb 07, 2013
Brannigan
marked it as to-read

Apr 09, 2012
Ryelor
marked it as to-read

Jul 14, 2013
Alicia
marked it as to-read

Dec 30, 2011
Emily
marked it as to-read