Skip to Main Content

2016 Summer Reading Program - Morton Freshman Center: The Young Elites

Cover

About the Author

Book Trailer

Book Reviews

Booklist Reviews:

Starred Review */ Adelina Amouteru is a walking wound. A deadly fever has ravaged her country, killing many and leaving others marked in strange and dangerous ways. Adelina is a survivor who carries two marks: once-black hair has turned silver, and her left eye is gone. Known as malfettos, those scarred by the disease are considered bad luck, even dangerous. There are rumors that some survivors have magical abilities, and after a dark confrontation with her power-hungry father, Adelina discovers that the fever may have left her with more than scars after all. Thrust into a group of rebel malfettos, the Young Elites, Adelina realizes the extent of her latent powers. Those familiar with Lu’s wildly popular Legend series will recognize the author’s propensity to include multiple perspectives, and here those viewpoints include other members of the Young Elites and their rebel leader, as well as the queen’s Inquisitor, who is hunting them all. Still, this is Adelina’s tale. Part bildungsroman, part origin story, this explores the idea that what damages you gives you strength, but often with a price. Lu’s careful world building does slow the plot, but the result is that Adelina’s Italianesque culture is believable, and the story leads to a whopper of a finale—and an even more intriguing epilogue. Fans of Legend or not, readers should prepare to be captivated—and to look forward to a continuation of the Young Elites series.

Summary

Adelina Amouteru survived the blood fever, a deadly illness that killed many, but left others with strange markings and supernatural powers. Cast out by her family, Adelina joins the secret society of the Young Elites and discovers her own dangerous abilities. Abilities that shouldn’t belong in this world. A vengeful blackness in her heart. And a desire to destroy all who dare to cross her.

Read the first few lines...

"I'm going to die tomorrow morning.
      That’s what the Inquisitors tell me, anyway, when they visit my cell. I’ve been in here for weeks
—I know this only because I’ve been counting the number of times my meals come.
   One day. Two days.
   Four days. A week.
   Two weeks.
   Three.
   I stopped counting after that. The hours run together, an endless train of nothingness, filled with
different slants of light and the shiver of cold, wet stone, the pieces of my sanity, the disjointed whispers
of my thoughts.
   But tomorrow, my time ends. They’re going to burn me at the stake in the central market square, for
all to see. The Inquisitors tell me a crowd has already begun to gather outside."

Rate this book!

Rate this book!
Loved this book!: 1 votes (100%)
Liked it, but didn't love it.: 0 votes (0%)
It was OK.: 0 votes (0%)
Didn't like it.: 0 votes (0%)
Total Votes: 1