Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Shades Children

Shades Children
Shades Children
Author: Garth Nix
If youre lucky, you live to fight another day.In a futuristic urban wasteland, evil Overlords have decreed that no human shall live a day past their fourteenth birthday. On that Sad Birthday, the children of the Dorms are taken to the Meat Factory, where they will be made into creatures whose sole purpose is to kill.The mysterious Shadeonce a ma...  more »
Audio Books swap for two (2) credits.
ISBN-13: 9781620649176
ISBN-10: 1620649179
Publication Date: 3/12/2013
Pages: 1
Edition: Unabridged
Rating:
  ?

0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: AudioGO
Book Type: Audio CD
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Shades Children on + 296 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Nix is a good writer, but this is not my favorite of his books. I found this had a much more depressing and hopeless tone than most of his other works, which have tended toward sad yet beautiful (Abhorsen) or dangerous yet hopeful (the Fall) or funny while challenging (the Keys to the Kingdom).
wss4 avatar reviewed Shades Children on + 389 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
This was a fantastic book!! Kind of made me think of a junior version of 'Battlestar Galactica', which is one of my favorite television shows.

The book takes place in a futuristic setting. One day all of the people over the age of 14 just disappear leaving behind nothing but children. Shortly after the adults disappear the children are rounded up and taken to dormitories where they are raised until their 14th birthday at which time they are taken away by creatures, to the Meat Factory. The Meat Factory is a holding area where the children are help until their brains and bodies are used to create more creatures, whose sole purpose is to participate in horrible war games for the enjoyment of 'overlords'. These overlords think of the children as nothing more than animals and treat them as such.

While most children are resigned to the fact that they will be taken away when on their 'Sad Birthday', some manage to escape, and try to stay alive, constantly running from the various creatures who hunt them down.

This book follows a group of 4 of those survivors who are taken in by 'Shade', a computer program that holds the consciousness of an adult man left over from before the Change. Shade shelters and trains the children to survive against the creatures, while at the same time, using them to gather information so that he can 'set things right'. His ultimate goal is to defeat the overlords and return the world back to the way it was before. But at what price?

This book is non stop action and I had a very hard time putting it down once I started it. What a fantastic storyteller Garth Nix is and I am looking forward to reading more of his books in the near future.
MeganLog avatar reviewed Shades Children on + 47 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I love Nix and the Abhorsen Trilogy was great but I swapped this as soon as I was done if you know what I mean.
Read All 10 Book Reviews of "Shades Children"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

blinkin123 avatar reviewed Shades Children on + 16 more book reviews
Suprisingly, I enjoyed this book a lot. I got it for free and thought that I would read a couple of pages and not like it. Boy was I wrong. It was easy to get hooked on this book. Very interesting story and some likeable characters. A little predictable, but still a good read.
reviewed Shades Children on + 88 more book reviews
This is a post apocalytic thriller. Nix is one of the best sci fi writer's around and this measures up to his other works.
Lots of action.
Once I started it I couldn't put it down.
I am a "mature" adult and I can say I loved it !
althea avatar reviewed Shades Children on + 774 more book reviews
Although not as good as his 'Abhorsen' trilogy, "Shade's Children" reminded me a lot of many post-apocalyptic books I read as a kid - so I rather liked it.
The premise is that beings from (possibly) a parallel world have taken over Earth, eliminating everyone over fourteen, and imprisoning and raising the human children in order to use their physical parts to create Creatures with which to play wargames. However, a few children manage to escape, and some of those come under the wing of Shade - a human-created AI which has been oddly enhanced by the fields that the alien (?) Overlords generate (and which also gives some human children precognitive or other powers). Shade's stated goal is to find a way to overthrow the Overlords and restore normality to Earth - but his methods are cold and ruthless - and will his own self-interest outweigh altruism?
It's an interesting premise, but I felt like there were quite a few logical plot holes, I didn't find that the social attitudes of the characters matched up realistically with their given backgrounds, and there were several aspects to the whole story that I wished had been more deeply explored.


Genres: