![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Metals can be controlled remotely, and Callie’s modified chip keeps her awake and aware, leading to a delightfully disturbing climax. Some glossed-over twists stretch believability, though the threat (and villain’s secret plan), smaller-scale than in Starters, is personal in a creepy way. Predictably, there is a raid, and all except Callie, Hyden and Michael are conveniently captured, launching an action-oriented rescue storyline and a series of plot twists. The developing romance stays in the background, as Callie and Hyden set about keeping the Metals from his father in the slow first half. Genius Hyden, who helped develop the chips, explains how to block the signals his father uses to track and control Metals. He commands Callie to meet him, but she’s intercepted and rescued by a boy claiming to be the Old Man’s son. Then the first book’s main villain, the Old Man, reaches out to her to demonstrate the deadly danger the chips pose if the chip-implanted teenagers, Metals, don’t obey him. Using an inheritance from Helena, the elderly woman who rented Callie’s body in Starters (2012), Callie’s carved out a life and safety for herself, her younger brother and her best friend, Michael. Teenagers with microchips that enable people to borrow their bodies evade those who would use them. ![]()
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