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An “exceptional” dystopian tale with “scathing commentaries on police brutality, crime prevention, population control, classism, and state-sponsored murder.”—Publishers Weekly Living the ideal life is a human right—unless you’re unregistered… Bristol lives under the watchful eye of the Metrics as an unlucky second child. The government grants its citizens the ideal life. Perfect spouse. Perfect job. Perfect home. But dare to have more than one child, and you’ll become an outcast—the unregistered. Now, he’ll protest the abusive system in the only way he knows how, painting controversial murals in the hidden parts of town. But the government doesn’t condone dissent. And the frustrated unregistered citizens need to be handled. The relocation plan goes into effect and all unregistered must be sent to far-off desert states. The question is whether Bristol and his friends will be able to escape the government’s clutches—and survive long enough to discover an unknown world…
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A group of friends in hiding try to stay alive—and learn that freedom has a price—in the follow-up to the “exceptional” dystopian thriller Unregistered (Publishers Weekly). The Metrics government has claimed success in relocating millions of Unregistered citizens out west. But those who escaped their insidious plan knows the truth—the government had their fellow outsiders murdered. As winter approaches the hidden monastery in the hills, Bristol, Samara, Denver, and Jude realize that the responsibilities of keeping their community safe and plotting their next escape have fallen upon them. But even when they make it outside, the political turmoil in their new country makes them question if life there is any better than under the Metrics. As trust fractures between the four friends and each tries to find a way to function in this strange new world, will they be able to continue working together to find the future they thought they wanted?
Our love affair with the digital interface is out of control. We’ve embraced it in the boardroom, the bedroom, and the bathroom. Screens have taken over our lives. Most people spend over eight hours a day staring at a screen, and some “technological innovators” are hoping to grab even more of your eyeball time. You have screens in your pocket, in your car, on your appliances, and maybe even on your face. Average smartphone users check their phones 150 times a day, responding to the addictive buzz of Facebook or emails or Twitter. Are you sick? There’s an app for that! Need to pray? There’s an app for that! Dead? Well, there’s an app for that, too! And most apps are intentionally ...
Four young friends band together in a frightening new world in this conclusion to the thrilling dystopian trilogy… The liberation of their homeland depends on Bristol, Samara, Denver, and Jude. Each has a unique role to play—but they all share the same mission. Yet, when the first phase of their plan is botched, the political climate of their new country turns on the little assembly of American refugees and forces them back into the shadows. Now, in a race against the clock, they must come together to save those they love back home and find their place in a new world. Will they be able to find justice for the people and save their homes, their freedom—and their lives?
A collection of letters written in honor of the 90th birthday of retired Notre Dame president Father Theodore M. Hesburgh.
Friends, Lovers, And The Big Terrible Thing by Matthew Perry This book gave me such a serious whiplash as I was understanding it. Perry swings ridiculously this way and that between having a transparent discussion about his enslavement, extreme navel looking and back taps about his distinction, faulting others in his life for his compulsion or length of dependence and afterward in the following passage making liability regarding his fixation and moves, and abnormal awkward remarks about ladies in his day-to-day existence. As somebody who has experienced AA, has done the means, and has been level-headed for a considerable length of time myself, I think perhaps Matthew Perry ought to have take...