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The Sky Inside [Hardcover]

Clare B. Dunkle (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 25, 2008
Martin lives in a perfect world.

Every year a new generation of genetically-engineered children is shipped out to meet their parents. Every spring the residents of his town take down the snow they've stuck to their windows and put up flowers. Every morning his family gathers around their television and votes, like everyone else, for whatever matter of national importance the president has on the table. Today, it is the color of his drapes. It's business as usual under the protective dome of suburb HM1.

And it's all about to come crashing down.

Because a stranger has come to take away all the little children, including Martin's sister, Cassie, and no one wants to talk about where she has gone. The way Martin sees it, he has a choice. He can remain in the dubious safety of HM1, with danger that no one wants to talk about lurking just beneath the surface, or he can actually break out of the suburb, into the mysterious land outside, rumored to be nothing but blowing sand for miles upon miles.

Acclaimed author Clare B. Dunkle has crafted a fresh and fast-paced science-fiction thriller, one that challenges her characters -- and her readers -- to look closer at the world they take for granted.


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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 5–8—A mediocre science-fiction novel from a wonderful fantasy writer. The setting, a domed suburb in some distant future, seems far too familiar and worn out. Like many books before it, The Sky Inside paints a bleak future filled with mind-numbed people going about their days. And, as always, there is one child filled with the curiosity to break through the mind freeze and find his way into adventure. Dunkle's setting and plot may be overdone and trite, but her characters show her true writing ability. Thirteen-year-old Martin, his A.I. dog, and his sister are well-rounded and thought-provoking characters filled with imagination and real emotions. Fans of science fiction may enjoy the story, even though they've probably read it before.—Lisa Marie Williams, East Gwillimbury Public Library, Holland Landing, Ontario
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Thirteen-year-old Martin idly wonders about the origins of the railway carts that bring food, enticing gadgets, and even test-tube babies into his steel-domed suburb. But when he witnesses the removal of a freethinking misfit in one of those carts, he begins to wonder what lurks beneath his suburb’s sheen of contentment. Then his parents allow his genetically enhanced sister to depart with a smooth-talking official as part of a “product recall,” and horrified Martin goes after her. Lois Lowry’s The Giver (1996) casts a long shadow here, but Dunkle makes this dystopian community her own, folding together elements of the Pied Piper folktale into Martin’s satisfyingly (though abruptly) fulfilled quest, and offering vivid, chilling details about his society (especially its ghoulish TV game shows and incessant advertisements) that will leave readers reflecting on their own media-deluged lives. Many children will identify with Martin’s characterization as someone who hates academics but “knows the stuff that matters,” and most will envy his robotic-dog sidekick, despite its predictable intervention in crises. From the author of the Hollow Kingdom trilogy for young adults, this entertaining, provocative novel invites middle-grade readers to ponder looming questions about scientific ethics, human rights, and the push-pull between security and freedom. Grades 4-8. --Jennifer Mattson

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 229 pages
  • Publisher: Ginee Seo Books; First Edition edition (March 25, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1416924221
  • ISBN-13: 978-1416924227
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #950,867 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Clare B. Dunkle was born Clare Buckalew and grew up in Denton, Texas. She earned a B.A. in Russian with a minor in Latin from Trinity University in San Antonio and worked in Trinity University's library after earning her M.L.S. from Indiana University. For seven years, she and her family lived in the Rheinland Pfalz region of Germany not far from the Roman city of Trier. Her daughters attended a boarding school there and read her first four books as a series of letters from home.

Dunkle's debut novel, THE HOLLOW KINGDOM, won the Mythopoeic Award for Best Children's Fantasy Book in 2004. Her books have earned spots on a variety of "best book" and "core" lists, including three Bank Street nods, and her fiction has earned starred reviews from Publishers Weekly, Booklist, and The Horn Book. She lives now in San Antonio, Texas, where she writes dark fantasy and science fiction for teens. In her spare time, she reads Victorian ghost stories.

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Sky inside, world outside, April 3, 2008
This review is from: The Sky Inside (Hardcover)
Having reinvented the whole mythos of fantasy's goblins and werewolves, Clare B. Dunkle now turns her attention to sci-fi.

In fact, there's something almost eerily prophetic about "The Sky Inside," a look at a sterile, soulless world where babies are genetically designed and populations are kept in an iron grip. Rather than dumping all the horrors on us at once, Dunkle slowly unfolds the secrets of this futuristic civilizations -- and as she does, turns the tension up to eleven.

Martin's parents have always told him that he should be grateful to live in domed suburb HM1. But then he runs into an old classmate of his, who is now insane and living underground -- and makes claims that cause Martin's world to crash down. As he tries to investigate further, a strange man comes to HM1, announcing that the genetically-engineered Wonder Babies are being recalled... including Martin's beloved sister Cassie.

Disgusted and enraged by the callous way the adults have sent off their children -- and his father's cowardly collaboration -- Martin and his clever robot dog set out to rescue the Wonder Babies. But soon Martin finds out the shocking truths about the world beyond the dome, and the horrifying secrets that his society is based on. And now that he knows, the government wants him dead as well...

Clare B. Dunkle certainly knows how to build suspense. "The Sky Inside" starts with a future world that is rather weird and artificial, but not exactly upsetting. But you are left with the question: Just what happened to the world, that people are living a plasticized, genetically-engineered existance inside a bunch of little domes?

But as Martin discovers more about his world, Dunkle drops clues and plot threads as he bumbles through his investigation. And as more of the truth is revealed, she spins a growing sense of horror and menace -- when Martin sees the drugged Bug, or when the Wonder Babies are coldly sent away, because they have inconvenienced their parents. Cue TV commercials for new, "better" kids. And you get the horrific reality show to end all reality shows, which is used to punish and execute.

Despite the serious nature of the book, Dunkle spins it out in her eloquent, detailed prose. There are some truly exquisite descriptions of the outside world, a family disintegrating from guilt and anger, and a few humorous scenes from Martin's trusty bot dog. But the most powerful has to be when Martin visits an empty suburb in a dead city ("... those familiar places seemed to gather around him, as if they had been waiting for his arrival to to give them their form").

The biggest problem? While it ends with secrets revealed and questions answered, there's still plenty about this world to deal with. In other words: sequel needed.

Martin is a likable grump of a hero, who is suitable suspicious despite having been raised in the domes. And Dunkle handles his growing loathing for his cowardly father well, as well as his determination to save the Wonder Babies. Bot dog Chip is a nice accompaniment to Martin, although a bit of a deus ex machina. Just why is he so intelligent?

Dunkle spins a powerful little sci-fi tale in "The Sky Inside," where the greatest threats to the human race are amoral science and human apathy. Definitely a good read for people who want to think.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking, March 27, 2008
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This review is from: The Sky Inside (Hardcover)
Clare B. Dunkle has done it again! This time, she goes from the past to the near future, to a world where everyone lives in a domed suburb, where people are encouraged to spend money, where a few shades of 1984 peek through. I highly recommend this book for anyone who thinks for themselves, and who enjoys a good, fast-paced story that starts twisting and turning more frequently as the story picks up steam and barrels along.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I wanted to like this book, but..., January 24, 2009
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This review is from: The Sky Inside (Hardcover)
[mild spoilers]
I practically foamed at the mouth when I saw this book on the shelves at the bookstore because I love dystopian stories so much! I'm glad I had the patience to wait to check it out from the library. This book was unevenly written, with some parts being riveting, but most of trying my patience as I waited for the hero to wise up to stuff I'd figured out three chapters ago. It seemed that the most interesting discoveries happened all in a rush at the end of the book with Martin being told everything about the world instead of finding it out on his own on his journey. The book also seemed to end abruptly right as what I would have called Martin's true adventure was beginning. I wanted to see more of the world outside the domed city in terms of people left alive. I also wanted to know more about the structure of the society in terms of who manufactures items and how they are shipped from one city to another. Who is overseeing that? Do some cities get preferential treatment? Plus, there was the biggest question left unanswered: from whence did Chip come? Was it just random or was someone behind it? It seemed kinda coincidental to me that this robot model that no one is supposed to have would just randomly be given as a gift to the one person who might figure out the full extent of his capabilities. She might redeem herself if there's a sequel that addresses these questions, but I've seen no indication one is forthcoming. I just wish it had been a better book. The Giver by Lois Lowry and Stolen Voices by Ellie Dee Davidson are both superior examples of this genre.
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