always in fun

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Sunday, 9 October 2011

Gene Splicing YA Fiction: "Tankborn" by Karen Sandler

Posted on 09:37 by john mycal

Publisher: TU Books of Lee & Low Books Inc.
Pages: 384
Release Date: October 2011
Genre:  YA Fiction/Dystopian/Sy-Fy



What They're Saying :

"A riveting, romantic, sci fi mystery
that explores the blurry lines between castes and what it means to be human. As suspenseful as thought-provoking--
I loved it!"
-Cynthia Leitich Smith, author of Tantalize

Book Summary :

Best friends Kayla and Mishalla know they will be separated when the time comes for their Assignments. They are GENs, Genetically Engineered Non-humans, and in their strict caste system, GENs are at the bottom rung of society. High-status trueborns and working-class lowborns, born naturally of a mother, are free to choose their own lives. But GENs are gestated in a tank, sequestered in slums, and sent to work as slaves as soon as they reach age fifteen.

When Kayla is Assigned to care for Zul Manel, the patriarch of a trueborn family, she finds a host of secrets and surprises-not least of which is her unexpected friendship with Zul's great-grandson. Meanwhile, the children that Mishalla is Assigned to care for are being stolen in the middle of the night. With the help of an intriguing lowborn boy, Mishalla begins to suspect that something horrible is happening to them.

After weeks of toiling in their Assignments, mystifying circumstances enable Kayla and Mishalla to reunite. Together they hatch a plan with their new friends to save the children who are disappearing. Yet can GENs really trust humans? Both girls must put their lives and hearts at risk to crack open a sinister conspiracy, one that may reveal secrets no one is ready to face.


Author's Bio.:


KAREN SANDLER is the author of seventeen novels for adults, as well as several short stories and screenplays. Before becoming a full-time writer, she worked as a software engineer, including work on the Space Shuttle program and communications satellites. Sandler first got the idea for Tankborn in the mid-1980s when she wrote it as a screenplay, and over the years while she was writing other books, the idea grew to include the planet Loka and Kayla’s life. Sandler lives in northern California with her husband, Gary, and their three cats, and can often be found riding her Andalusian/Morgan mare, Belle. This is her first novel for young adults.



The Dame's Review:


All dystopian/sy-fy novels are not created equal.  "Tankborn" is an exception to the ordinary in a variety of ways.  First, author Karen Sandler has a gifted imagination and writing skill that lures the reader in quickly.  Secondly, she writes in such a way that it's easy to visualize. This dystopian is a singular one.  It's not to be missed.

"Tankborn," refers to the quasi-people and animal mixes (GENs)
Sandler's new world produces by way of gene-DNA-splicing to birth "lowborns."  These "lowborns" are made to be the workers, indeed the slaves, of the new world--and to set the lowest chaste of the society. 

While the GENs think and feel for the most part at different levels parceled out to them, they can be reprogrammed and reset to perform tasks.  They can also be killed and abused at a whim.  These tankborns are the most vulnerable and disposable of all "people" in society.  In addition, they've been created to set the lowest rung of the societal scale, creating a hierarchy for marking the "trueborns."  They are cloaked in superstition, have mottled and a plethra of different skin colors and hair texture, and can also resemble some of the animals spliced into their genes.

Into this tankborn mix we're introduced to our main characters Kayla and her "tanksister," Mishalla.  They, of course, have no idea if they are sisters, but their close friendship keeps them connected.  At the age of puberty Gen's are separated from their Nurtur and given an Assignment.  Kayla's Assignment to an elderly highborn allows her path to cross with her friend who is operating as a Nurtur for baby orphans.  In a nutshell, the babies begin to be "taken" or to disappear. Disturbed by this, Kayla and Mishalla work together to find out why and where they're taken.  Kayla suspects she may have been one of these disappeared babies since she has a different face pattern and personality than the other tankborns.  She's always felt different from her fellow GENs.

I've given you as much of the background story as I can without spoiling it for you!  Now, it's up to you to discover the secrets of this captivating book, and to make your own conclusions about the gene-splicing.

I found "Tankborn" a book I didn't want to stop reading.  Its difference lies in the realism Ms Sandler creates around her characters. This is not a too sweet and too romantic story, but one with a contemplative warning.  She presents her story as if it takes place in this timeframe, and as if it reflects our own society or one that could be closely related to ours in the 21st century.

The concept of a hierarchy in society isn't a new one.  The idea of enslaving a group of people to assure the "haves" remain in control, in power and at the top of the financial structure is familiar throughout history.  Revolt and rising up against tyranny is inate, as well.

I thoroughly enjoyed "Tankborn," and can recommend it to you.  It's one I would get for your Kindle or Nook.

4 unspliced stars

Deborah/TheBookishDame
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in Karen Sandler, Sci-Fi, YA fiction | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • "Clarity" ~ YA Book
    GoodReads Summary: "When you can see things others can't, where do you look for the truth? This paranormal murder mystery will hav...
  • My Response: Wall St. Journal Bookshelf~YA Fiction "Darkness Too Visible"
    On June 4, 2011, The Wall Street Journal~Bookshelf section published an article by Meghan Cox Gurdon entitled: " Darkness Too Visible:...
  • Tribute Books Publishing: Evolving into YA Market~ An Interview with Owner, Nicole Langan
    Nicole Langan Tribute Books Publishing An Introduction to Tribute Books :  Tribute Books celebrates its 7th year in 2011 as an independent...
  • Gene Splicing YA Fiction: "Tankborn" by Karen Sandler
    Publisher: TU Books of Lee & Low Books Inc. Pages: 384 Release Date: October 2011 Genre:  YA Fiction/Dystopian/Sy-Fy What They're Sa...
  • A Thanks to Publishers, Authors & Followers
    Because it's Thanksgiving, but actually because it gives me a good excuse to let them know, I'd like to extend my gratitude to the f...

Categories

  • abandonment
  • Adriana Trigiani
  • Alexandra Monir
  • Alicia Rasley
  • Amy Efaw
  • Andrea Cremer
  • Animals
  • Anita Shreve
  • Anjali Banerjee
  • Ann Aguirre
  • Anne Rice
  • art theft
  • art work
  • artist
  • Austen mashups
  • Author Interview
  • Author Jodi Picoult
  • Author Joyce Carol Oates
  • B.A. Chepaitis
  • backwoods
  • Beatrix Potter
  • Bernadette Pajer
  • best books of 2011
  • Beth Kephart
  • Bette Davis
  • Blair Richmond
  • Blog Related
  • Book Review
  • Books
  • Brenna Yoranoff
  • C.W. Gortner
  • Cameron Stracher
  • Cancer
  • Caragh M. O'Brien
  • Carole Waterhouse
  • Caroline Kennedy
  • cathedral
  • Cathy Mazur
  • celebrities
  • celebrity photos
  • Charlie Price
  • Chevy Stevens
  • Children's Book
  • Christmas
  • Classics
  • Classics and Mashups
  • Coffee
  • Colin Firth
  • colors
  • controlling mothers
  • cookbook
  • Cormac McCarthy
  • Cornelia Funke
  • crafts
  • Craig Stephan
  • Current Events
  • Cynthia Rogers Parks
  • D.E. Johnson
  • Daisy Goodwin
  • Daniel Woodrell
  • Danielle Trussoni
  • Darcy and Lizzy
  • Darien Gee
  • dead people
  • Deborah Lawrenson
  • Denise Mina
  • detectives
  • DL Fowler
  • Dogs
  • Duane Swierczynski
  • dying
  • dystopian
  • Elizabeth Bennett
  • Elizabeth Naughton
  • Ellie James
  • emery lee
  • Emma Thompson
  • Erin Morgenstern
  • Europe
  • family dynamics
  • fantasy
  • father abandonment
  • fears
  • Film Noir
  • forensics
  • Gail Giles
  • Galley Cat
  • Gary McMahon
  • General
  • General Fiction
  • ghosts
  • gifts
  • Giveaway
  • goodreads
  • Gothic
  • Gothic fiction
  • Greg Kiser
  • Grief
  • Hachette Publishing Group
  • hair story
  • Halloween
  • Harper Collins
  • heaven
  • Hemingway
  • Heroine
  • historical fiction
  • historical Japan
  • Hoarding
  • home and garden
  • horror
  • humor
  • illustrated book
  • indie lit awards
  • interior design
  • interview
  • Inzanesville
  • Iolanthe Woulff
  • James Feinstein
  • Jane Austen
  • Jane Rowan
  • Japanese art
  • Jewish culture
  • Jo Ann Beard
  • Joely Sue Burkhart
  • Jonathan Franzen
  • Journalism
  • Joyce Hostetter
  • Karen Russell
  • Karen Sandler
  • Karl Friedrich
  • Kate Atkinson
  • Katherine Spencer
  • Kathleen Kent
  • Kathryn Casey
  • Kathryn Stockett
  • Kathy Reichs
  • Kelly Jones
  • Kevin Henkes
  • Kim Harrington
  • knitting
  • Kristi Cook
  • L.A. Banks
  • laughter
  • Lauren DeStafano
  • Lauren Myracle
  • Leslie Esdile Banks
  • Literary Heroine
  • living dead doll
  • Lois Lowry
  • lost family
  • lost family members
  • love connections
  • Malinda Lo
  • Manet
  • Manhattan Project
  • Marcia Clark
  • margaret george
  • Maria Duenas
  • Maria Lucia
  • marriage
  • Mary Carter
  • Maryann Lin
  • Meg Mitchell Moore
  • Megan Abbot
  • Melissa Foster
  • Memoirs and Non-Fiction
  • Memoirs and Other
  • Michael David Lukas
  • Michael Koryta
  • Michelle Hoover
  • Michelle Zink
  • Midnight Dragonfly series
  • Moroccan
  • motherhood
  • Mr. Darcy
  • Mrs. Darcy
  • mystery
  • Nazi
  • New Mexico
  • New Orleans
  • News
  • NH
  • Nicole Krauss
  • Oppenheimer
  • Ozarks
  • palm reading
  • paranormal
  • Paula Brackston
  • Paula McLain
  • Pemberley
  • Penguin Group
  • Pete Hamill
  • Peter Rabbit
  • photos
  • Poetry
  • Polio
  • predators
  • Pride and Prejudice
  • Provence
  • psychological novel
  • psychology
  • psychosis
  • Rachel Simon
  • Ransom Riggs
  • rape
  • Reading
  • Reading Challenge
  • recommendations
  • Regan Black
  • Regency
  • reviews
  • Richard Barager
  • Richelle Mead
  • Rick Harrison
  • Robb Forman Dew
  • Sam Hilliard
  • scary
  • Sci-Fi
  • seer
  • Sensory Processing Disorder
  • Shephardic family
  • shoes
  • short stories
  • Siddahartha Mukherjee
  • Stacy Cohen
  • Starbucks
  • steampunk
  • Steve Piacente
  • supernatural
  • Susan Beth Pfeffer
  • Suspense
  • Suspense Thrillers
  • T.K. Varenko
  • T.L. James
  • Tanya Plank
  • Tara Hudson
  • teen aged dangers
  • therapy
  • TLC Book Tours
  • Tom McNeal
  • Vampires
  • Video
  • Vietnam
  • WASPs
  • werewolves
  • women in art
  • women pilots
  • Women Writers
  • woods
  • Writing
  • WWII
  • YA fiction
  • yarns

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2011 (188)
    • ►  December (15)
    • ►  November (19)
    • ▼  October (26)
      • "Emma and the Vampires" Jane Austen and Wayne Jose...
      • "Out of Breath" by Blair Richmond ~ Runners & Vamp...
      • Anne Rice~A Retrospective and Hope for "The Wolf's...
      • "Prized" by Caragh W. O'Brien Rules As Wonderfully...
      • "Night Stranger" by Chris Bojalian ~ Wonderfully W...
      • A Witchie Wonderflly Wicked Read-A-Thon this Weekend!
      • Moammar Gaddafi ~ Dead By Mob Killing
      • "Veronica's Nap" by Sharon Bially ~ Jewish Women T...
      • National Book Award Uh-Oh Finalist~"Shine" by Laur...
      • Please Read ~ "Don't Sing At The Table" by Adrian...
      • "The Lantern" by Deborah Lawrenson ~ Far Cry from ...
      • "The Corn Maiden and Other Nightmares" by Joyce Ca...
      • "The Time In Between" by Maria Duenas~ Luminous an...
      • "You Are My Only" by Beth Kephart~A Stunning Novel...
      • "The Shattered Dreams" A Midnight Dragonfly Novel ...
      • Gangsters, Murder & Mystery 1911 Detroit ~ "Motor ...
      • All Psychosis Aside, Motherhood ~ "The Winters In ...
      • Gene Splicing YA Fiction: "Tankborn" by Karen San...
      • "Last Minute Knitting" by Joelle Hoverson~Now in E...
      • Friends and Followers~Quick Note from the Dame
      • Have You Ever Lost Someone Special?~Read "The Mani...
      • Irish, Believable Novel of Acceptance ~ "The Pub A...
      • Laughing and Sexology Personified! "Shoes Hair Na...
      • Which Literary Heroine Are You? Mike Wells's Quiz...
      • WW II Flygirls ~ Giveaway: "Wings" by Karl Friedri...
      • Nazi Stolen Art Featured In: "The Woman Who Heard ...
    • ►  September (33)
    • ►  August (18)
    • ►  July (18)
    • ►  June (14)
    • ►  May (10)
    • ►  April (14)
    • ►  March (13)
    • ►  February (2)
    • ►  January (6)
  • ►  2010 (29)
    • ►  December (11)
    • ►  November (16)
    • ►  October (2)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

john mycal
View my complete profile