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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing...realistic tale and strong characterization
I have had a mini-facination with pologymst cults and I thought it was very interesting that there was a young adult novel written about it. I read these stories and am amazed time and time again by how strong these women have to be to leave their families, their religion, their entire lives, to start out with nothing. This story was very similar to the autobiographical...
Published on April 28, 2009 by S. McCullough

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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Tough One to Read but Well Written
I found THE CHOSEN ONE to be very hard to read only because of the raw and ruthless way Kyra is treated. She does not want to marry her uncle but being in the world of polygomy, they try to force her to. When Kyra resists, she brings upon herself a violent reprisal.In harshly trying to get her to obey, they actually force her away from this world which to that point is...
Published on July 23, 2009 by Bingo-Karen Haney


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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing...realistic tale and strong characterization, April 28, 2009
This review is from: The Chosen One (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
I have had a mini-facination with pologymst cults and I thought it was very interesting that there was a young adult novel written about it. I read these stories and am amazed time and time again by how strong these women have to be to leave their families, their religion, their entire lives, to start out with nothing. This story was very similar to the autobiographical stories that I have read, and if possible, it was every bit as heartwrenching. Kyra, is an almost 13 year old, living with her father and her mother (father's third wife) and an large assortment of brothers and sisters. She has recently begun a 'secret' flirtation with a boy on the compound who has told Kyra that he wants to 'chose' her to be his wife, his only wife. The two have heard stories, and seen what happens to those who don't follow 'God's' rules...really the so called Prophet's rules. Kyra's other 'sin'? She secretly meets Patrick, the mobile library driver each week to sneak a book to read. Then one day the prophet comes to vist, something he hasn't ever done before, and announces to the family that he has had a vision from God. God's revelation has told him that Kyra is to be married to Brother Hyram. Brother Hyram happens to be Kyra's sixty year old uncle. Kyra is to be Hyram's seventh wife. Aghast, Kyra vows not to let this happen. Unfortunately the Chosen Ones will stop at nothing to make sure the marriage goes through. In the past, they haven't been above murder to make sure things go their way. What happens to Kyra and those who love her is heartbreaking. Carol Lynch Williams does a standout job of making Kyra's family empathetic...it is clear Kyra's father and all three of his wives care deeply for her. They take some risks for her, but they never quite go far enough. This also rang painfully realistic to me. The story is sad, I am a bleeding heart and I did tear up several times. I read this book in a short couple of hours. I am passing this book on to my 13 year old stepdaughter in hopes that she will take to heart Kyra's strength. A must read for both adults and teens.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 4.5/5 stars - don't miss this one!, June 11, 2009
This review is from: The Chosen One (Audio CD)
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The story The Chosen One, by Carol Lynch Williams was inspired by a true story told by a girl who escaped from a Polygamist compound. While this book is a work of fiction I fear the story itself rings true to much of what goes on in this type of cult.

In this story thirteen year old Kyra has one father, three mothers and some twenty brothers and sisters with two more on the way. Books are banned in the remote compound where she lives, as books are said to be the work of Satan. Kyra sneaks off to the Mobile Library on wheels where she learns she can borrow books. She only takes (1) book to start so that she will be able to hide it from everyone. Kyra also has been sneaking off to meet Joshua a boy she has come to adore, and the two are planning for a future together despite the risk of meeting in secret. One day everything changes.

Kyra and her family learn that the "Prophet" will be visiting. Everyone suspects that this means her father will be chosen as an Apostle, but that is not what happens. The Prophet tells them he has had a vision and that Kyra has been chosen to be the "seventh" wife of her 60 year old uncle in just four weeks!

Does Kyra try to run off with the boy she loves, even though she may never see her family again? What happens to her and her family if she gets caught?

This story brings up important moral questions that we seem to be hearing about more and more. It seems to me that this one would make an excellent book for classroom discussion at the high school level as the story contains various important themes: personal freedom, religious cults, and societies norms.

The Chosen One was an excellent audio book that I enjoyed a lot. I did find the ending a bit disappointing but I would still recommend this book for both young adults and adults alike.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A BOX WITH A PRIZE INSIDE, June 5, 2009
This review is from: The Chosen One (Audio CD)
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From the back of the box:

Thirteen-year-old Kyra has grown up in an isolated community without questioning the fact that her father has three wives and she has twenty brothers and sisters. That is, without questioning them much - if you don't count her secret visits to the Ironton County Mobile Library on Wheels to read forbidden books, or her meetings with Joshua, the boy she hopes to choose for herself instead of having a man chosen for her.

But when the Prophet decrees that she must marry her sixty-year-old uncle - who already has six wives - Kyra must make a desperate choice in the face of violence and her own fears of losing her family forever.

When I received this box in the mail with the five CDs inside, I thought if nothing else, it would help pass some windshield time, while I was behind the wheel in traffic. However, as the story of Kyra, the little girl growing up in a polygamist family unfolded, I found myself more and more interested in finding out what would happen next.

***

This is a story written for young adults, but I enjoyed it as a not-so-young adult and plan to pass it on to a few younger people that I know. When the story was finished, I found myself wanting to know more, wanting the story to continue, and I just sat there in my car, in my driveway, listening to the dead silence of the completed CD. Then an interview started between the author, Carol Lynch Williams and Dr. Michael Tunnell. I listened to the whole interview there in my driveway, which I found very interesting as well.

There are probably going to be a number of parents and teachers who think that the subject matters presented in this book are too mature for young adults. I happen to disagree with these parents and agree with the author, Carol Lynch Williams, when she said in her interview that we "shouldn't pull any punches with older kids." They happen to be a lot smarter than we think, anyway. Also, there is no better way to get a kid to read than to give them material to read that covers things, ideas, places, and characters that are new, exciting, scary, and contain places that they've never seen or heard of, or like in this case...lifestyles that are so odd, controversial, and precarious. Isn't that what we adults like to read, too?

To make the whole story even better...this audio version is read by Jenna Lamia, who does an excellent job; I mean she gets Kyra's voice and personality spot on!

Highly recommended as a young adult novel.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Important, Heart-Wrenching Book, June 3, 2009
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This review is from: The Chosen One (Hardcover)
Thirteen-year-old Kyra has grown up surrounded by a large, loving family, with sisters who are her best friends and parents who are always available to her. In Kyra's case, however, her family consists of a father, three mothers and 20 siblings. She lives in an isolated community of "Chosen," who deliberately shun the outside world and live a polygamous lifestyle.

For much of her life, Kyra has accepted her community unquestioningly. But things are starting to change as she approaches the age where she will be expected to become someone's wife. In fact, when she is chosen by her own uncle to be his seventh wife, Kyra's mothers, father and sister think they understand her revulsion and fear, but they have no idea of the secrets that live in her heart. Unknown to anyone in her family, Kyra has fallen in love with Joshua, a boy near her own age, who wants to choose Kyra --- and be chosen by her. In recent years, however, such love matches have been all but impossible, as all the old men like Uncle Hiram have their pick of all the young girls like Kyra. Confessing their feelings to the community's leadership could put both their lives in danger.

Kyra is determined not to accept her fate unquestioningly. Her illicit trips to the mobile library van, and her befriending of the kindly librarian, have opened her eyes to a different world beyond her compound's walls, one that is full of magic, wonder and freedom, not just sin and depravity the way her elders would have her believe. Does Kyra have the courage to make a life for herself outside the only world she has ever known?

Polygamous sects have been much in the media of late, ranging from news stories of ill-fated raids at polygamous compounds to the tragicomic depiction of polygamous life in the HBO show "Big Love." In THE CHOSEN ONE, however, Carol Lynch Williams reaches far beyond parody or satire, instead vividly imagining the inner life of one very intelligent young woman whose mind and body are trapped in a system far bigger than she is.

Kyra is a fully realized character, both a product of her environment and a determined individualist, valuing books, reading and music as a way to cope with her limited future. Williams also realistically portrays Kyra's love for her family, which is clearly passionate and authentic, despite the fact that her family structure bears little or no resemblance to most readers'. She soon realizes that it will be impossible to reconcile her desire for freedom with her dedication to her family. Watching her try to negotiate this choice, readers will be rooting for this compelling, unusual, thoroughly human character to come out on the other side --- whichever side that is --- happy and whole.

THE CHOSEN ONE is an important, heart-wrenching book, one whose nuanced examination of an unusual inhabitant of a little-known society will not be soon forgotten.

--- Reviewed by Norah Piehl
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An unflinching look at the dark side of polygomy, May 4, 2009
This review is from: The Chosen One (Hardcover)
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This powerful novel doesn't pull many punches. The voice of the thirteen year old narrator will draw you into the insular world of "The Chosen" and make you care deeply about her and her family. This make the brutality of what happens to her all the more painful. Kyra does not want to marry her uncle, as decreed by the Prophet, and her response unleashes a torrent of violence intended to discipline her into obedience. Instead it drives her ever further away from the only world she's ever known.

This book is written for a young adult audience, which makes it a very fast read. However, the unflinching look at the darker side of polygomy might make some readers in this target audience uncomfortable. For younger readers that are just testing the waters of young adult fiction, the subject matter in this book might well be more than they are ready for. However, for readers with the appropriate levels of maturity, this is a powerful glimpse into the ways that religion and power can breed corruption and violence.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow. Tragic, Triumphant and Probably... True, May 2, 2009
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This review is from: The Chosen One (Hardcover)
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When I opened this first person account by a thirteen year old named Kyra, I didn't think much was wrong with her rather constrained life. Then I realized it was set in present day America, not a century ago!

Kyra is one of The Chosen Ones, a group run by a mysterious Prophet and his Apostles. At thirteen, Kyra is the eldest daughter of a polygamist with three wives and a twenty children, aged from seventeen to eight months. She longs to leave the hot, dusty and hopeless compound where she and her family are living but she can find no way to get out. The compound is in the desert, far from town, and the only contact Kyra has with the outside world is when she sneaks off to the Mobile Library on Wheels, where she reads books. Books bring her to a world outside the Compound, and make her long for a place where she can live and think for herself.

One evening, The Prophet and some of the Apostles come to visit the squalid trailers reserved for those families who aren't them. This time, they have come to visit Kyra and her family, a visit they seem to dread. Kyra's father, Richard has hopes that he will finally be chosen as an Apostle, an honor which seems to have been denied him for a long time. His wives pray that this will be so, because they would be allowed to live in a house instead of trailers, and perhaps Kyra's mother would survive her current pregnancy.

But the news could not be less welcome: thirteen year old Kyra has been "chosen" to be the seventh wife of her uncle, Hyrum, who is at least sixty. She wants to refuse, to run away, to be with Joshua, a boy upon whom she has a crush. But Women and children are less than nothing to The Chosen Ones, as they exist only to serve men. The tiniest resistance is met with terrible physical punishment and death is a common enough punishment that no one even thinks much about it any more. Even infants are not spared, we find out, when eight month old Mariah is nearly drowned for the crime of crying.

I won't go any further because I don't want to spoil the book, but I found it an amazing, gripping little tale. It's a slim book and a fast read, as the evil emanating from the Chosen Ones compound seems to surround and smother Kyra and her family, like the smoke from a nearby forest fire. She is thwarted at each turn by men who have dealt with reluctant teenaged brides before. But with each passing horror, she becomes more and more determined to escape, and not submit to her elderly uncle, a man who has rather fast hands for an Apostle. Her uncle, The Prophet, the God Squad, and the other Apostles are just as determined that Kyra will submit, and be the epitome of the obedient child bride.

Although the book is considered fiction, it could be plucked from the headlines. The beatings, the forced modesty, the killing of babies, the "disappearance" of young men, and the marriage of young girls to old men all have been reported recently as the press takes a close look at some of the radical forms of worship that take place in Texas, Utah or other secluded corners of the Western U.S. The Chosen One is not only a very good read, it's an important book, and would be devoured by young women, from early teens through early twenties. Even an old lady like me was unable to put down the book until I learned what finally happened to Kyra!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating, suspenseful story studded with complex characters, April 30, 2009
This review is from: The Chosen One (Hardcover)
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This book captivated me from its first sentence to its last. Kyra is a very likable and highly sympathetic character, and her story is extremely suspenseful. There is enough tragedy peppered throughout the story that you know in the reading this is not one of those books where everyone gets a happy ending. You can only hope that Kyra will. I will not say too much about the dynamics of her relationships with her family, friends, community, but they are complex and believable. The heart goes out to some who are well-intentioned and loving but ineffective at protecting themselves or others. The villains may not be on screen enough to become fully three-dimensional, but the heroes--and victims--certainly are. There is not a stock character among them.

Caveat to parents consider this: the book is by no means explicit in its handling of some very mature subjects (like barely teenaged brides), but its subjects are very mature. There is a very ugly underbelly to Kyra's story, and if the story doesn't dwell on it, it doesn't pretend it's not there.

I recommend.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Edge-of-your-seat adventure, but not (IMHO) realistic, January 25, 2010
This review is from: The Chosen One (Hardcover)
First of all, let me say this is a thrilling adventure story in some ways. People are chased; people are beaten; people are killed. Kyra makes a strong and interesting heroine, as we see her life in her isolated polygamist sect, with her 19 siblings and 3 mothers. However, I found the writing (and many of the characters) to be the one-dimensional good-or-evil type. The story is written in a "this could really happen" manner, but I don't think the things in this story COULD really happen to the same person in the same time frame. Maybe some of the events, in some situations, but so many events are piled into poor Kyra's sect that I found myself thinking "oh, come on, now!" I did not find it believable that the sect could be as abusive as portrayed and yet no one from the "outside world" (or within) would investigate (or speak up in a way that was heard.)
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Review-The Chosen One, September 8, 2009
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Basil MacDougal (The Corner of My Room) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Chosen One (Audio CD)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Excellent narration that really helps draw the listener into the story. I have had a fascination with cults and polygamist communities such as this, so I found the story to be of great interest.

The Chosen One is a heartbreaking tale of a 13 year old born into a polygamist group and, believe me, it kept me on the edge of my seat and was quite emotional. It seemed so true to life from the things I have read about these cult religions.

I know it is for young adults, and I think they will enjoy it, but as a middle aged adult, I too enjoyed it quite a bit.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping story that won't let you put it down, June 15, 2009
This review is from: The Chosen One (Hardcover)
It has been awhile since I have given a book a 5 stars but I just had to for The Chosen One. Kyra's story pulls you right into her life have you will come to care for her so much you just want to march into that compound and beat the crap out of the so called leaders of this community. Despite not feeling well while reading this book I could not stop reading until I got to the end and my heart was actually racing as I waited to find out what would happen to Kyra.

I have seen those TV specials or news coverage about polygamist communities and felt sorry for some of the men and especially women living in those communities but it's nothing like seeing their life through Kyra's eyes. To hear what she is experiencing, what she feels and watch the actions of even those who may disagree with what is going on but who are too scared to do anything about it is heart wrenching. I normally do not like to judge other people's beliefs but I find it hard to believe that a god would condone hold a baby's head down in a bucket of ice water or beating and killing women for disobeying an order to marry their own blood relative. I have read stories about those who have escaped life in these communities but this book also reminds me of all those who are left behind and are too scared, too weak or for other reasons are not able to leave and are forced to live this life against their wishes. I know (or hope) not all community's are like the one portrayed in this story.

Truly, this is a wonderful book that I would highly recommend.
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The Chosen One
The Chosen One by Carol Lynch Williams
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