Impostors
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Impostors 〰️
I loved the Uglies series. The world-building was fantastic, the characters were fun to read, and the story was super cool. So, when I heard there was a new trilogy set in the world of Uglies, I was all in.
Sadly, as good as this book was, it didn't live up to the original series, in my opinion. Aside from throwing a few random things (like the mention of the MC of Uglies, Tally Youngblood, some world-related phrases, like "brain-missing," and a few world-building things from the original series), there wasn't much that resembled Westerfeld's original world. Also, having this book written in first person threw me off a little because all the other books were in third person. (That last point is just a nitpick thing on my end. The prose was fine; I was just used to a different way of storytelling for this futuristic world).
While this book didn't feel completely related to an already well-established series, I did still enjoy it. Not a massive fan of how much military stuff is happening, though. I wasn't expecting that. But it was well written, and so it's all good.
As with Westerfeld's other books, the pacing is perfect. Everything happens right when it needs to, and nothing felt like too much of an info dump. Although even though I don't find there isn't too much to tell this is from an established series, I do think that if you haven't read the Uglies, some parts would be confusing. (If you have, then when the lingo of the world is used, you'd be just fine).
All in all, I'm happy to be reading this series again. It's cool to learn even more about the Uglies world. Westerfeld's writing never disappoints. And I knew it was coming. The cliffhanger ending. His previous works all ended in an "oh my God, I need to read the next book now" ending. So, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to do just that and dive into book two!