One of Us

One of Us

by Jeannie Waudby

Narrated by Melody Grove

Unabridged — 9 hours, 59 minutes

One of Us

One of Us

by Jeannie Waudby

Narrated by Melody Grove

Unabridged — 9 hours, 59 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$13.67
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $13.67

Overview

When sixteen-year-old K narrowly survives a bomb attack, she agrees to cross the line: to go under cover, befriending the radical young group held responsible. But it's hard making friends when you're lying. And what K discovers is far from black and white. Even enemies become real people - and one boy is special. Can she ever tell him who she really is? Can love unite them all?

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

08/24/2015
This provocative thriller, Waudby’s debut, is set in a modern society divided between everyday citizens and the minority Brotherhood, a quasi-religious group that is the target of discrimination and institutionalized oppression. As the two sides move toward Reconciliation, terrorist attacks from the Brotherhood threaten to destabilize such efforts. After narrowly surviving a bombing, 15-year-old orphan K is recruited by the police to go undercover with the Brotherhood in hopes of ferreting out its radical elements. Instead, she finds acceptance and another side to the story, as well as the beginnings of romance. Increasingly distrustful of her handler, K—now known as Verity—tries to break free in order to dictate her own destiny. In making the details of K’s world generic, Waudby draws on universal themes that can speak to almost any “us vs. them” conflict, be it religious, ethnic, or cultural. However, knowing so little about the setting—such as why the conflict exists in the first place or what makes the Brotherhood distinct—also distracts from the story, weakening an otherwise compelling narrative with a strong protagonist, relatable characters, and tense plotline. Ages 13–up. (Nov.)

From the Publisher

“This is a taut, suspenseful thriller that has obvious parallels with current political events, but what really makes this stand out is the characterization of K/Verity Nekton. The teen is strong and resourceful, but she is also morally conflicted and vulnerable to manipulation. The depictions of her growing affection for the Brotherhood community and her struggles to do the right thing are absolutely believable. VERDICT Recommend this one to teen readers who have tired of dystopias and are looking for something new and different.”
—School Library Journal, starred review

“It's an irresistible page-turner that's full of complex characters rather than stereotypes, tackling a sensitive subject with storytelling that is as engrossing as it instructional about prejudice and the gray areas between right and wrong. A timely and riveting debut thriller about tolerance and the complexities of truth.”
—Kirkus Reviews

“Waudby draws on universal themes that can speak to almost any “us vs. them” conflict, be it religious, ethnic, or cultural.”
—Publishers Weekly

School Library Journal

★ 10/01/2015
Gr 7 Up—Fifteen-year-old K has no family and no home. She has been told that her parents died in a bombing orchestrated by the Brotherhood, a radical separatist organization. Raised by her grandmother, then dumped in a halfway house, she has never gone to school and has no idea where she can go or what she can do when she turns 16 and is out of the care system. When she barely escapes death in a train bombing, her rescuer recruits her to infiltrate the Brotherhood and bring him names of those involved in violent activities. At first, K, whose new name is Verity Nekton, thinks she is doing right and avenging her parents' deaths, but gradually she finds that the Brotherhood is far more complex than she has been led to believe. She also finds that for the first time in her life, she has a home, friends, and family, as well as a budding romance with Brotherhood member Greg. As she begins to question what she has been told, she uncovers one deception after another until she must make a decision about her relationship with the Brotherhood and face a horrifying betrayal. This is a taut, suspenseful thriller that has obvious parallels with current political events, but what really makes this stand out is the characterization of K/Verity Nekton. The teen is strong and resourceful, but she is also morally conflicted and vulnerable to manipulation. The depictions of her growing affection for the Brotherhood community and her struggles to do the right thing are absolutely believable. VERDICT Recommend this one to teen readers who have tired of dystopias and are looking for something new and different.—Kathleen E. Gruver, Burlington County Library, Westampton, NJ

Kirkus Reviews

2015-08-05
Fifteen-year-old K discovers deception on all sides when she infiltrates a terrorist group After narrowly escaping a bomb attack on New City's subway system, K is asked to go undercover at a school run by the group responsible for the attack, the Brotherhood. New City's citizenry sees the Brotherhood as the enemy; they are a large minority group that has existed outside the mainstream for many years. Orphaned at 2 when her parents were killed in a Brotherhood attack, K agrees to spy on the group, hoping to put a stop to their reign of terror. With a new identity, K moves into the Institute in order to identify students being lured into the Brotherhood's extremist factions. But as K is assimilated into the Brotherhood, she begins to question everything she's been taught about them. She wonders whom to trust, who the bad guys really are—and who she really is. In her debut, Waudby both draws parallels to real-world issues of religion and violence and makes them personal: K wants not only justice, but love, home, and a family. It's an irresistible page-turner that's full of complex characters rather than stereotypes, tackling a sensitive subject with storytelling that is as engrossing as it instructional about prejudice and the gray areas between right and wrong. A timely and riveting debut thriller about tolerance and the complexities of truth. (Thriller. 13 & up)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176116700
Publisher: W. F. Howes Ltd
Publication date: 07/23/2015
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews