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Son [Hardcover]

Lois Lowry
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (299 customer reviews)

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The Best Books of 2012
Best Books of 2012 This book has been selected by our editors as one of the Best Teen Books of 2012.

Book Description

October 2, 2012
They called her Water Claire. When she washed up on their shore, no one knew that she came from a society where emotions and colors didn’t exist. That she had become a Vessel at age thirteen. That she had carried a Product at age fourteen. That it had been stolen from her body. Claire had a son. But what became of him she never knew. What was his name? Was he even alive?  She was supposed to forget him, but that was impossible. Now Claire will stop at nothing to find her child, even if it means making an unimaginable sacrifice.

Son thrusts readers once again into the chilling world of the Newbery Medal winning book, The Giver, as well as Gathering Blue and Messenger where a new hero emerges. In this thrilling series finale, the startling and long-awaited conclusion to Lois Lowry’s epic tale culminates in a final clash between good and evil.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Gr 6 Up-Those frustrated over the ambiguous ending of Lowry's The Giver (1993) will be thrilled with the conclusion (2012, both Houghton Mifflin) to the quartet. Listeners are brought full circle, returning to the fate of Gabriel, the little baby saved from "release" by Jonas. The story begins with Claire, who emerges from unconsciousness following a difficult birth to find that her child (or product) has been cut from her, and she has been "decertified." In the haste to get her to a new assignment, no one has bothered to supply her with the pills that everyone must take to keep them from feeling things. Claire develops an intense longing to find her son, leading her on a daunting and epic journey that weaves together the worlds and characters of the first three novels. Bernadette Dunne's whispery voice is perfectly suited to this dramatic, satisfying tale. Whether portraying the naive 14-year-old Claire or the evil Trademaster, Dunne captures the very essence of the characters. Lowry has again created a powerful tale rich with themes like sacrifice, loss, the importance of memory, and the restorative power of empathy that will elicit exciting classroom discussions. A must-have for all libraries with audio collections.-Lisa Hubler, Charles F. Brush High School, Lyndhurst, OHα(c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Review

"Written with powerful, moving simplicity, Claire's story stands on its own, but as the final volume in this iconic quartet, it holistically reunites characters, reprises provocative socio-political themes, and offers a transcending message of tolerance and hope. Bravo!"
Kirkus, starred review

"Lowry is one of those rare writers who can craft stories as meaningful as they are enticing."
Booklist, starred review

"Son is a tender conclusion to this memorable story, and definitely the best of the books in this sequence since The Giver itself."
School Library Journal, starred review

"The strength of this novel is its compassionate portrait of a mother's commitment to her lost child."
Horn Book

"In the completely absorbing opening, Lowry transports readers back to the horrifying world from which Jonas came."
Publishers Weekly

“A consummate stylist, Lowry handles it all magnificently: the leaps in time, the shifts in perspective, the moments of extreme emotion — fear, joy, sadness — all conveyed in unadorned prose that seizes the heart. Give this book to your child, your grandmother, your senator, your neighbor: It’s a bipartisan tale for our times.”
The Washington Post

“Lois Lowry's Son [is] a gripping end to the Giver series”
The Los Angeles Times

“It's the kind of book that will stay with you for days as you wonder about what it says about human nature, society, and the future of society.”
—YPulse.com

"A quiet, sorrowful, deeply moving exploration of the powers of empathy and the obligations of love."
The New York Times Book Review

Product Details

  • Age Range: 12 and up
  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Books for Children; 1 edition (October 2, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0547887205
  • ISBN-13: 978-0547887203
  • Product Dimensions: 5.7 x 1.4 x 8.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (299 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,598 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Lois Lowry is known for her versatility and invention as a writer. She was born in Hawaii and grew up in New York, Pennsylvania, and Japan. After several years at Brown University, she turned to her family and to writing. She is the author of more than thirty books for young adults, including the popular Anastasia Krupnik series. She has received countless honors, among them the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award, the Dorothy Canfield Fisher Award, the California Young Reader.s Medal, and the Mark Twain Award. She received Newbery Medals for two of her novels, NUMBER THE STARS and THE GIVER. Her first novel, A SUMMER TO DIE, was awarded the International Reading Association.s Children.s Book Award. Ms. Lowry now divides her time between Cambridge and an 1840s farmhouse in Maine. To learn more about Lois Lowry, see her website at www.loislowry.com

author interview
A CONVERSATION WITH LOIS LOWRY ABOUT THE GIVER

Q. When did you know you wanted to become a writer?

A. I cannot remember ever not wanting to be a writer.

Q. What inspired you to write The Giver?

A. Kids always ask what inspired me to write a particular book or how did I get an idea for a particular book, and often it's very easy to answer that because books like the Anastasia books come from a specific thing; some little event triggers an idea. But a book like The Giver is a much more complicated book, and therefore it comes from much more complicated places--and many of them are probably things that I don't even recognize myself anymore, if I ever did. So it's not an easy question to answer.

I will say that the whole concept of memory is one that interests me a great deal. I'm not sure why that is, but I've always been fascinated by the thought of what memory is and what it does and how it works and what we learn from it. And so I think probably that interest of my own and that particular subject was the origin, one of many, of The Giver.

Q. How did you decide what Jonas should take on his journey?

A. Why does Jonas take what he does on his journey? He doesn't have much time when he sets out. He originally plans to make the trip farther along in time, and he plans to prepare for it better. But then, because of circumstances, he has to set out in a very hasty fashion. So what he chooses is out of necessity. He takes food because he needs to survive. He takes the bicycle because he needs to hurry and the bike is faster than legs. And he takes the baby because he is going out to create a future. And babies always represent the future in the same way children represent the future to adults. And so Jonas takes the baby so the baby's life will be saved, but he takes the baby also in order to begin again with a new life.

Q. When you wrote the ending, were you afraid some readers would want more details or did you want to leave the ending open to individual interpretation?

A. Many kids want a more specific ending to The Giver. Some write, or ask me when they see me, to spell it out exactly. And I don't do that. And the reason is because The Giver is many things to many different people. People bring to it their own complicated beliefs and hopes and dreams and fears and all of that. So I don't want to put my own feelings into it, my own beliefs, and ruin that for people who create their own endings in their minds.

Q. Is it an optimistic ending? Does Jonas survive?

A. I will say that I find it an optimistic ending. How could it not be an optimistic ending, a happy ending, when that house is there with its lights on and music is playing? So I'm always kind of surprised and disappointed when some people tell me that they think the boy and the baby just die. I don't think they die. What form their new life takes is something I like people to figure out for themselves. And each person will give it a different ending. I think they're out there somewhere and I think that their life has changed and their life is happy, and I would like to think that's true for the people they left behind as well.

Q. In what way is your book Gathering Blue a companion to The Giver?

A. Gathering Blue postulates a world of the future, as The Giver does. I simply created a different kind of world, one that had regressed instead of leaping forward technologically as the world of The Giver has. It was fascinating to explore the savagery of such a world. I began to feel that maybe it coexisted with Jonas's world . . . and that therefore Jonas could be a part of it in a tangential way. So there is a reference to a boy with light eyes at the end of Gathering Blue. He can be Jonas or not, as you wish.

Amazon Author Rankbeta 

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#17 in Books > Teens
#17 in Books > Teens

Customer Reviews

The story was well paced and I felt the ending was very satisfying. Michael P. Long  |  33 reviewers made a similar statement
The Giver has been my favorite book since I first read it in middle school. Jennifer Propes  |  36 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
53 of 56 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable end to a award-winning series August 23, 2012
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
While I was thrilled to see "The Son" by Lois Lowry, the final book in the "Giver" series available through Vine, I also felt guilty, having rated "The Messenger" more harshly than it perhaps deserved, having believed all along that the series was a trilogy, not a quartet. It didn't really explain what happened to Gabe, whose fate was left ambiguous in the first book. So that was one question I thought would remain a mystery.

"The Son" starts with the birth of a "Product" to a fourteen-year-old girl named Claire, who has been chosen as Birthmother in the same community where Jonas originally lived. Something goes drastically wrong, and although the child survives, Claire is left sterile, and relegated to a dull job at the Fish Hatchery. She's also left in the dark as to what has happened, having been blindfolded throughout the procedure. None of her fellow community members can offer any enlightenment and do not share Claire's maternal yearnings (or any type of passion). (Fans of "The Giver" will easily figure out why Claire is different.) As a result, she is somewhat alienated but very determined to see her son again.

From the hatchery, Claire gets a chance to view the incoming ships and a taste of what a different community might be like. She also begins volunteering at the center where the "newchildren" are and becomes friendly with Jonas' father, who works as a nurturer there. As she figures out that Gabe (or the fractious young "Number Thirty-Six") is indeed her son, the series reader is on familiar territory and knows ahead of time what's going to happen. Eventually, Claire sets off in search of Gabe, which brings her to a community which tolerates far more individuality in its members, although the people there are puzzled at the gaps in her knowledge of things such as colors and music. Although Claire is accepted there and finds a mentor, she decides to move on. Her quest for her son will lead her into danger, both physical and supernatural. Her story then overlaps with Jonas', Kira's and Gabe's. Is there a happy ending? I won't spoiler it, but will say that once done, you have more satisfying answers than you did at the end of "The Messenger."

"The Son's" main theme is choice; as in "Harry Potter," the characters are forced to decide between doing what is right and what is easy. What is sacrificed may wind up causing unexpected pain, and attempts to put things back the way they were may not work. As any fan of fairy tales knows, being granted your heart's desire is often the path to misery, regardless of how it appears beforehand. Is a world whose inhabitants are basically content really worth it, or does it wind up creating people who feel like outcasts anyway? What then are the options for those who don't, or can't fit in? How do you develop a gift if no one in your community can conceive of what you're capable of? The "Giver" series goes far in ably exploring these questions and prompting the reader to do so, as well.
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56 of 63 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Like so many others, I loved "The Giver". I finished reading it and started right out reading it again, something I have done with almost no other book in my life. I felt like it was a near perfect book. I eagerly read "Gathering Blue" and "Messenger" and was rather disappointed with both of them. They contained good enough reading, but felt far more ordinary than The Giver---like books that had been written before about fairly primitive societies with mild supernatural elements. They didn't have the stunning oddness of the society in The Giver. I had high hopes that Son would loop back to where it all started and revisit that world.

"Son" does indeed start in the same society as "The Giver", but it is set during the same time period as the first book, and in a lot of ways, simply retells that story from a different perspective. The story then moves to a new society, a seaside world set at the edge of a cliff seperating it from the rest of the world, and then to the world of "Messenger". The story follows Claire, a birthmother from the Giver society, on a quest. I won't give away any plot points, but the book works to tie everything up, and in a lot of ways, it does. However, in the ways I truly wanted, it didn't. We really have no more idea than when we started as to the whys of it all. How did this world come to be, split in small odd societies? How did the strange world of The Giver get planned and started? Why is technology so different in each world? Most of all, I would just like to find out more about Jonas and Claire's original home, the planned, sterile world of The Giver.

The writing is skilled here, and the emotions portrayed are dramatic. There is more than I would like of long detailed descriptions of physical journeys, and the somewhat misplaced Trademaster from Messanger, a sort of jarring supernatural element, plays much more of a role than I'd like, but overall, the book is well plotted and well paced. It just feels a small amount like a cop-out to me. Or more accurately, like yet another attempt to perfect an already near perfect literary achievement, "The Giver". Some books don't need sequels, although you might want one. I did, but now I realize perhaps I should have left well enough alone, and maybe Lois Lowry should have too.
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35 of 40 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
SON is the final volume in Lois Lowry's epic series which began with THE GIVER. Pulling together characters from all three previous novels, SON both concludes Jonas's journey and celebrates the ultimate power of love over evil. This is a magical and mythic story, set in three distinct and different communities. But in all three the yearning for love becomes the definition of what it means to be human.

The first part of SON takes place in the same community where Jonas became apprentice to "The Giver." This time, however, we see the story from the perspective of fourteen-year-old Claire, who is about to deliver her first child (or "Product," as the community calls it). Claire is a "birthmother," and her role is to produce "newchildren" to be assigned to married couples. When something goes wrong during the delivery, Claire is reassigned to the Fish Hatchery and her newborn son is sent to the nursery. She is not supposed to think about him again, but she can't help it, and before too long she's manufacturing excuses to visit him, to learn about him, and to become part of his life. Something happens, however - those familiar with THE GIVER know what that is - and Claire is left alone to escape this community that has denied her the right to love.

Claire's story continues in a new community at the edge of the sea, surrounded by massive cliffs that keep the village isolated and cut off from other people. Here, Claire becomes more and more fixated on finding her son - no longer a baby - but "climbing out" is a dangerous feat that has seldom been attempted. Can Claire scale the massive cliffs and find her son? What will she have to give up in order to succeed? And will her ultimate sacrifice be worth it in the end?

The final section of SON takes place in the same village where MESSENGER is set. We meet Jonas again, who was once Leader of that community, and Kira (first introduced in GATHERING BLUE). Gabe is there too, now fifteen and determined to discover the truth about his past. All of their stories - and Claire's - come together in the novel's exciting conclusion, as they learn that "Those who aren't nourished will die." This is a satisfying and uplifting final volume in what is a wonderful series for children and young adults.

As always, Lowry's prose is crisp and beautifully simple; she uses just enough interesting words to challenge young readers without frustrating them. The subject matter here may be a bit more mature than what we find in THE GIVER, but it's a story young teens are sure to love. My only disappointment is that Lowry never gives us a glimpse of what Jonas's community was like after he left. That was always something that intrigued me - all those emotions and colors flooding back into their lives must have really shaken things up! Also, I've long been convinced that Jonas died at the end of THE GIVER - I know Lowry has discussed this, and her decision to "hint" at his survival in the subsequent novels was made to satisfy younger readers who were devastated at the thought of his death. She once said readers were free to interpret this any way they chose. But here the "hints" are made real, and there is no doubt that both Jonas and Gabe survived. I think that does change the significance of the ending of THE GIVER. But I have to admit, I like the way Jonas and Gabe play into this final book. So I'll go with the flow!

SON is a wonderful novel, and a worthy conclusion to Lowry's GIVER series. I recommend it wholeheartedly to anyone who has read the earlier books. If you haven't read them - lucky you! - I suggest starting with THE GIVER, since much of this story reflects that novel. These are great novels and Lowry is a great writer. Highly recommended.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars I wish the series didn't end.
This is a great continuation in the giver series. Great book. Great series. Great author. Certainly worth a read. I wish there were more books in the series.
Published 2 days ago by H. Diehl
5.0 out of 5 stars Story Line!
I enjoyed the story line as it is picked up from her last book. I liked how the characters over came evil and eventually find each other. Read more
Published 6 days ago by JR
5.0 out of 5 stars An impressive ending!
In the final installment of The Giver series, Lois Lowry delivers! The first book in Son is told from Claire's point of view, the birthmother of Gabriel(the baby that was saved... Read more
Published 6 days ago by sftblmem
5.0 out of 5 stars LOVE this book
I highly recommend this book! Wonderful story and concept. Lois did a wonderful job with this story and the other books in this series. Great job!
Published 7 days ago by Kim Starr
3.0 out of 5 stars Ties it together but...kinda boring
This novel really wraps up the quartet. It especially clarifies many things about Messenger that were still mysterious. It's jut not that exciting to read. Read more
Published 8 days ago by Jason Yoesting
5.0 out of 5 stars Love
Bought this for a road trip for my daughter. She has listened to it 3 times. It's so moving and full of depth, a refreshing change from so many of today's novels for youth.
Published 9 days ago by Candace Weaver
5.0 out of 5 stars Son
Son is a wonderful book. It was touching, inspiring and moving. I'm only sad that it was the last book in the series. I want to know more!!!
Published 10 days ago by Jordan Mertins
5.0 out of 5 stars a peak into the core of souls
"Son" is the most fitting conclusion to the harrowing journey that we (the readers) started with "The Giver". Read more
Published 13 days ago by openmind
5.0 out of 5 stars Book
Great book. A must read. You should definitely read these three parts to find out a thrilling ending to the giver quartet
Published 15 days ago by Ryan James Zurcher
5.0 out of 5 stars Love Lois Lowry!
Lois Lowry does a great job of writing four very individual books that come together to make a great continuing story. Read more
Published 15 days ago by Kimberly Hatcher
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