Uglies

For the baked food called "Uglies", see Fritter.
Uglies

Uglies, the first book in the series
Author Scott Westerfeld
Cover artist Russell Gordon and Rorigo Corral
Series Uglies
Media type Print (Paperback)
ISBN 0-689-86538-4
OCLC 57686394
LC Class PZ7.W5197 Ugl 2013
Followed by Pretties

Uglies is a 2005 science fiction novel by Scott Westerfeld. It is set in a future post scarcity dystopian world in which everyone is turned "Pretty" by extreme cosmetic surgery upon reaching age 16. It tells the story of teenager Tally Youngblood who rebels against society's enforced conformity, after her newfound friends Shay and David show her the downsides to becoming a "Pretty".

Written for young adults, Uglies deals with themes of change, both emotional and physical. The book is the first installment in what was originally a trilogy, the Uglies series, which also includes the books Pretties, Specials, and Extras. The book shares many themes with the 1964 The Twilight Zone episode "Number 12 Looks Just Like You".[1] The author of the books noted that he saw the episode in his childhood but had forgotten the details.[2]

Plot

Three hundred years in the future,[3] the government provides for everything, including plastic surgery operations. Everyone on their sixteenth birthday receives the “pretty” operation which transforms them into the society's standard of beautiful.[4] After the operation, new Pretties cross the river that divides the city and lead a new life with no responsibilities or obligations. There are two other operations available, one to transform Pretties into “Middle-Pretties” (adults with a job), and another to transform Middle-Pretties into "Crumblies."

Former cities have decayed after bacteria infected the world's petroleum, making it unstable. The old society, so dependent on oil, fell apart when cars and oil fields exploded and food could no longer be transported. People who lived before this catastrophe are called "Rusties."[5]

Tally Youngblood is almost sixteen. Like every other Ugly, she awaits the operation with great anticipation. Her best friend, Peris, has already had the operation and, motivated by her desire to see him, Tally sneaks across the river to New Pretty Town.[6] There she meets Shay, another Ugly. They become friends and Shay teaches Tally how to ride a hoverboard. Shay also mentions rebelling against the operation. At first, Tally ignores the idea, but is forced to deal with it when Shay runs away a few days before their shared sixteenth birthday, leaving behind cryptic directions to her destination, a “renegade settlement” called the Smoke, where city runaways go to escape the operation.[6]

On the day of Tally’s operation, she is taken to Special Circumstances, a division that is likened to “gremlins” and “[blamed] when anything weird happens."[7] Dr. Cable, a woman who is described as “a cruel pretty”,[8] is the head of Special Circumstances. She gives Tally an ultimatum to either help locate Shay and the Smoke, or never become a pretty. Tally cooperates and Dr. Cable gives her a hoverboard and all the needed supplies to survive in the wild, along with a heart locket that contains a tracking device. Once activated, it will show the location of the Smoke to Special Circumstances. Following Shay's clues, Tally sets off to find her friend.

When Tally arrives at the Smoke, she finds Shay, her friend David and an entire community of runaway Uglies. She is reluctant to activate the pendant and it eventually becomes clear that David is in love with her. David takes her to meet his parents, Maddy and Az, who are the original runaways from the city. They explain how the operation does more than “cosmetic nipping and tucking.”[9] It also causes lesions in the brain to make the people placid, or “pretty-minded.” Horrified, Tally decides to keep the Smoke secret and throws the locket into a fire. However, the flames' heat causes the tracker to activate, giving away the Smoke’s location.

The following morning, Special Circumstances arrives at the camp and Tally makes an effort to escape. She does not succeed and is caught and taken to a rabbit pen, where other caught Smokies are kept, tied up. Eye scans are taken of all the captured Smokies, identifying from which city they fled. Tally is then taken to Dr. Cable, who explains how they found the Smoke. Dr. Cable thinks Tally purposefully activated the pendant. After being ordered to retrieve the pendant, Tally escapes on a hoverboard. After a long and stressful chase, she manages to hide in a cave where they cannot track her heat signature. There she finds David also hiding and together, they begin to plan a rescue.

Tally and David go back to his house, where they find evidence that Special Circumstances took Maddy and Az. David leads Tally to a secret stash of survival equipment[10] where they find everything they need, and load them onto the four hoverboards stashed there. As Tally and David travel back to the city to free their friends, they fall in love. Arriving at the Special Circumstances complex, they discover that Shay has already been “turned” and is now a Pretty.[11] After meeting Dr. Cable, David knocks her out and takes her work tablet, which contains all the necessary information to reverse the brain lesions created by the Pretty operation. Tally and David then free all the Smokies held in the complex. As they escape the complex, Maddy tells David that his father, Az, is dead.

Once everyone is safe, Maddy begins working on a cure using Dr. Cable’s tablet.[12] She then offers it to Shay, who refuses, not wanting to become a “vegetable.”[13] Since Tally feels responsible for her betrayal, she decides to become a Pretty and take the cure as a “willing subject”.[14] To convince David to let her go back to the city, she tells him about her involvement with Special Circumstances and searching for the Smoke to betray them. While David is absorbing what Tally admitted, Maddy advises Tally to go back with Shay before she changes her mind. Once there, Tally announces to a Middle Pretty, “I’m Tally Youngblood. Make me pretty,” the final phrase of the novel.[15]

Characters

Uglies

Smokies

Specials

Pretties

Major motifs

Identity

According to critics, Uglies contains themes of identity, particularly regarding teenagers. Phillip Gough said the government of Tally’s city, which controls what happens within the operation, “removes responsibility for identity, ” creating sameness and uniformity.[16] By placing heavy emphasis on the role of individualism, the novel shows the importance of teen’s self-concept.[16] Because identity is formed by “displacement,” and all citizens are carefully sheltered, there is no chance for them to branch out into independence.[16] “Physical identity is determined by committees," noted Gough in his essay discussing Westerfeld’s novel.[16] Due to the lack of choice, all “markers of physical identity” are destroyed by their government.[16]

Beauty

Kristi N. Scott and M. Heather Dragoo note that another recurring theme in the “image-obsessed society,” is beauty, and its recurring relationship with individuality.[9][17] Gough agreed, commenting that “when everyone is equal, beauty loses its meaning”.[16] Beauty went hand in hand with identity: Uglies were taught to think of their bodies and faces as “temporary”, something that would be replaced later with cosmetic surgery.[16] A strong line is drawn to connect features with personality, and one critic stated that the characters develop “ugly” and “pretty” personalities with each stage of their operations.[16]

Dystopian society

A “utopia resting on ruthless suppression of individual freedom” was Amanda Craig of The Times’s description of Tally’s city.[18] Many critics identified the trend of a controlling government in the novel.[19] People in the protagonist’s world are “programmed and designed by the Pretty committee, ” with no say-so in their operation, and identity is placed firmly “in the hands of the state”.[16] Dragoo and Scott point out how segregated the city is, with Pretties, Uglies, Middlies, and Crumblies neatly divided into different sections.[17] Many reviewers have commented on the way in which the city manipulates its inhabitants, including the supposedly rebellious uglies, who are nothing more than “docile bodies”.[16] Bedies, the dystopian society depicted by Westerfeld includes a particularly common trope in the genre: the duality of spaces, the metropolis representing the totalitarian civilization and nature as a field for freedom.[20]

Humanity

Various critics also found a theme of humanity within Uglies. Phillip Gough noted that Pretties and Specials (those who worked for Special Circumstances) are “posthuman” because of their operations.[16] Others, including Scott and Dragoo, argued against this, claiming “the human body provides an artistic and political canvas for intentional manipulation," and that this physical transformation can be an “outlet for humanity”.[17] The novel Uglies seems to take no definite stance on it, though clearer points are shown in Pretties and Specials, the following books in the trilogy.

Background

When asked how he came up with the idea of Uglies, Westerfeld said, "the inspiration came from a friend whose dentist asked him to consider getting cosmetic surgery." [21] He is the son of a computer programmer for Univac, which meant he grew up familiar with the cutting edge of 1960s technology. Amanda Craig said that "it is his prescient perception of how such inventions will lead to absolute loss of privacy which has elicited as much fan-mail as the issue of how looks dominate our lives." [22]

In the dedication page for Uglies, Westerfeld says: “This novel was shaped by a series of e-mail exchanges between myself and Ted Chiang about his story “Liking What You See: A Documentary.” His input on the manuscript was also invaluable.” In another interview, Westerfeld says that this documentary is about a new technology that enables an individual to turn off their ability to see beauty so they can focus on the deeper and more important parts of another individual. In a 2012 interview on Bookyurt, Westerfeld explained that his point in writing the book was not make a big commentary on the issues with beauty, but to make people aware of the culture of retouching that is developing in the world and to be aware of our own ideas about beauty and our need to think for ourselves.[23]

Reception

The novel has received mostly positive reviews. The Baroque Body praised the novel as having “creative slang, unique technical gadgets, and defining characteristics of personhood.”[17] Cory Doctorow complimented its “perfect parables of adolescent life,” and stated that it is “fine science fiction for youth."[24] Jennifer Mattson claimed it to be “ingenious. ”[9] Reed Business Information praised the “convincing plot” and noted that it is “highly readable.”[25]

However, Publishers Weekly commented that Tally was a “rather passive protagonist,”[26] and the United Kingdom Times complained that “Tally herself is a bit too vague as a character.”[18] Critic Jennifer Mattson noted that the brisk pace of the novel as being “bad for convincing relationships.”[9]

The novel sparked discussion over the use of plastic surgery to improve one's looks. The author said he has “received many letters from girls who have decided against having surgery since reading Uglies,” while others, sparked by Uglies, have started to ponder the ethics of changing your body’s appearance.[3] Westerfeld has theorized that “having extreme cosmetic surgery will be like buying a $1,000 Gucci bag, an indication that you are a member of the privileged class."[3] Critics echo his opinion. However, Westerfeld has also stated he “wouldn’t hesitate [to use plastic surgery] if he had a kid with port-wine stain. We have all been altering our appearances ever since clothing was invented.”[3] Other critics have stated that while altering one's appearance with plastic surgery can be ethically debatable, the benefits of it to people who have need for it are tremendous.[27]

There is also some moderate debate sparked by Uglies over the issue of monitoring people. The state has started to track teens through their cell phones and on occasion through dental implants.[3] Westerfeld feels that this will “result in a total loss of privacy,” however, others feel that this technology is necessary to properly supervise people.[3]

Adaptations

Film

20th Century Fox and producer John Davis (Eragon) bought the film rights to the novel in 2006.[28] The movie was originally scheduled to be released in 2011, according to the Internet Movie Database, but the release date was pushed back.

The movie Uglies was once again in the works as of July 3, 2013.

Graphic novel

Steven Cummings illustrated Uglies in a manga-style graphic novel written by Westerfeld and Devin K. Grayson called Shay's Story which tells the story from Shay's perspective. It was published in a black-and-white 5¾ x 8¼ inches format by Del Rey Manga in 2012. There has also been an audio recording made of the book (published in 2006), available on both CD and cassette.[26][29]

Publication history

The novel Uglies was first published in 2006, and re-released in 2011 with a new cover.[30] It is the first part of a trilogy, with sequels Pretties, and Specials, and another book Extras.[30] The trilogy featured on the New York Times bestseller list for a significant amount of time.[3]

Bibliography

Westerfeld, Scott (2005). Uglies. Uglies Tetralogy. one (two ed.). New York: Simon Pulse. p. 406. ISBN 978-1-4424-1981-0. 

References

  1. "Why haven't I read these books?". The Book Smugglers. 6 August 2009. Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  2. Westerfeld, Scott (3 January 2008). "Number 12 Looks Suspiciously Familiar". Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Craig, Amanda (11 November 2011). "Future Imperfect". The Times. United Kingdom. p. 15. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  4. Westerfeld, p. 83
  5. http://scottwesterfeld.com/books/uglies/
  6. 1 2 Robinson, Kimberly Downing (Fall 2012). "Book Review". Interdisciplinary Humanities. 27 (2): 151–154. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  7. Westerfeld, p. 120
  8. Westerfeld, p. 191
  9. 1 2 3 4 "Uglies". Publishers Weekly. New York, New York. 252 (12): 53. 21 March 2005. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  10. Westerfeld, p. 338
  11. Westerfeld, p. 364
  12. Westerfeld, p. 388
  13. Westerfeld, p. 397
  14. Westerfeld, p. 395
  15. Westerfeld, p. 406
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Gough, Philip. ""Who am I? Who was I?": The Posthuman and Identity Formation in Scott Westerfeld's Uglies Trilogy". Thesis Essay. Roehampton University (School): 10. Retrieved 16 March 2012.
  17. 1 2 3 4 Scott, Kristi; M. Heather Dragoo. "The Baroque Body: A Social Commentary on the Role of Body Modification in Scott Westerfeld's Uglies Trilogy" (PDF). Thesis Essay. Retrieved 16 March 2012.
  18. 1 2 McKinley, Robin (2006-01-21). "Pretty faces, hideous truths". The United Kingdom Times. The United Kingdom. p. 17. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  19. Galdon Rodriguez, Angel (2014). "Urban and Natural Spaces in Dystopian Literature Depicted as Opposed Scenarios". Ángulo Recto. Revista de estudios sobre la ciudad como espacio plural. 6 (2). doi:10.5209/rev_ANRE.2014.v6.n2.47585.
  20. Galdon Rodriguez, Angel (2010). "Urban and Natural Spaces in Dystopian Literature Depicted as Opposed Scenarios". Ángulo Recto. Revista de estudios sobre la ciudad como Espacio plural. 6 (2). doi:10.5209/rev_ANRE.2014.v6.n2.47585.
  21. "Interview: Scott Westerfeld". Chicklish. Retrieved 19 May 2013.
  22. Craig, Amanda. "Scott Westerfeld interview: future imperfect". Retrieved 16 May 2013.
  23. "Interview: Scott Westerfeld". Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  24. Doctorow, Corey (January 1, 2006). "Uglies: young adult sf that perfectly captures adolescent anxiety". Boing Boing. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  25. Hunter, Susan W; Jones, Trevelyn E; Toth, Luann; Charnizon, Marlene; Grabarek, Daryl; Raben, Dale. "WESTERFELD: Scott. Uglies.". School Library Journal. Reed Business Information / Reviews. 51 (3): 1. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  26. 1 2 Grayson, Devlin (5 March 2012). "Uglies Shays Story". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 14 March 2012. (registration required (help)).
  27. Laferla, Ruth; Natasha Singer (December 15, 2005). "The Face of The Future". Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  28. Fleming, Micheal (2006-06-26). "Sitting Pretty". Daily Variety. gotham. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  29. Parravano, Martha V. "Scott Westerfeld Uglies". Horn Book Magazine. Media Source, Inc. 83 (1): 91–91. ISSN 0018-5078. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  30. 1 2 Westerfeld Publication Page
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