Author: Pauline C. Harris
Pages: unknown
Published: April 28th 2013 by Fire and Ice Young Adult Books
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Notes: This was given to me through Author Alliance for an honest review. Thank you!
Summary: Drew is an android. From the very beginning of her existence, she has been programmed by her creators to understand her superiority and overwhelming responsibilities. She was created for a mission, a mission more important than anything she could ever have imagined.
Drew is sent to a high school to observe the humans and report back to her creators. But when she begins to form friendships with these humans and starts feeling strange human emotions, she doubts the creators’ ways of dealing with her and wonders whether her mission is as wonderful as it once seemed.
As Drew falls deeper and deeper into the mystery surrounding her mission and her creation, she’s suddenly left with a choice. Does she follow through with what she’s known all her life or does she act on what she now knows is right?
MY REVIEW
Mechanical is a story about a
high school student named Drew. Drew is much different from the typical
student. She is an android, and she is perfect. She has been asleep for many
years until the creators turned her on again. Drew is given a mission and she
must follow through with it. She is sent to a local high school, and observes
the humans. Things start to change for Drew. She starts to make friends with
the humans, and starts to fall in love with one. This is where things start to
get difficult. Drew’s mission changes and Drew starts to question her creators
and why exactly she had been turned back on from years of being shut off.
Mechanical is your classic droid
vs maker and good vs. evil. I really enjoyed this book. It isn’t the typical YA
book that I read, and it was the first sci-fi one that I’ve read. I loved Drew.
It was interesting to watch her go through the process of what she was used to
doing to what she thought was right; being with the humans changed her ways of
thinking on the creators. It was a struggle for her, and that struggle made her
more human. She also has to work at blending in with the humans. Picking up on
how they laugh, talk, and behave around each other so she fits in.
It wasn’t until half way through
the book that Drew started to see the real picture. She hears that her roommate
Yvonne’s mission changed, and she wants to empress the creators so bad.
However, when she starts to realize what she’s doing she again fights her inner
morals. She begins to rebel.
Overall this book was a fast and
enjoyable read. At the end, I literally said ‘Oh man!’ out loud because I
wanted more, and it does leave you hanging. It’s a perfect set up for a
trilogy. I can’t wait to read the next ones!
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