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23 bytes removed ,  16:08, 6 November 2014
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|buy=Yes
|borrow=Yes
|format=Paperback
|pages=336
|publisher=Puffin Books
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0141381442</amazonuk>
|amazonus=<amazonus>0439899737</amazonus>
|website=http://www.myspace.com/kevinbrooksauthor
}}
A routine endoscopy looking for stomach ulcers ends sixteen-year-old Robert Smith's conception of himself as a teenage boy like any other. Conscious but still anaesthetised, he can hear the commotion surrounding an operation gone wrong. For the surgeons haven't found an ulcer. Instead, they have found a network of mysterious and advanced technological implants. Terrified, they have called in a shadowy government agency and a sinister agent called Ryan appears to be directing the doctors. And then all hell breaks loose. On the run from the authorities, Robert hooks up with Eddi Ray, the ex-girlfriend of an old friend's brother. Eddi specialises in producing false identities and together they try to find out what has happened to Robert.
{{amazontext|amazon=0141381442}}
{{amazonUStext|amazon=0439899737}}
 
'''Reviews of other books by Kevin Brooks'''
 
[[Lucas]]
 
[[The Road of the Dead]]
{{commenthead}}
{{comment
|name=Magda
|verb=said
|comment= OK, I'll read some of his.
In my so called time and place we didn't have any teenage fiction like that, as far as I remember anyway. Or maybe, some. But mostly it was tainted by a moralising streak.
 
 
 
}}
{{comment
|name=Jill
|verb=replied
|comment= Read Lucas first then, as it's my favourite. I think "young adult" writing is a relatively new phenomenon, cos I only really remember thinking Catcher In The Rye was ok if you were a boy but crap if you were a girl and then moving straight on to Jack Kerouac and thinking pretty much the same thing. I think I went from decent children's books via trashy adult books straight to cult fiction. Some of this teen market, obviously, is tosh, and it's increasingly being invaded by genre pieces corresponding to adult genre fiction, but some of it, like the stuff by this guy, is truly excellent.   
}}
{{comment
|name=Magda
|verb=said
|comment= I have just read Lucas, and it was good, I wouldn't have given it 5 stars though. The story is great in its inevitability, and the Lucas figure is outstanding, the animal element in particular was a master's touch.
But there was something with the narrator's narration that just left me cold: perhaps her constant meta-analysis and listings of the emotions (as in: "there was so many emotions xxx, yy, zzz" and then again "all these emotions aaa, bb, ccc").
Oh, and I could never understand the furore over Catcher in the Rye, I always thought his short stories were much better.
 
 
}}
{{comment
|name=Jill
|verb=replied
|comment= Ha. You're a navel-gazer and you moan about navel-gazing? Funny lady!  
}}
{{comment
|name=Kerry
|verb=said
|comment= I can't believe from the review, Jill, that this is a teenager\'s book...is it like adults who read Harry Potter? Does it translate to adult fiction?  
}}
{{comment
|name=Jill
|verb=replied
|comment= Um... no. It's teen fiction. Meant for teenagers. Where Harry Potter is light genre fiction meant for pre and early teens and is sometimes enjoyed by adults, Being is a complicated contemporary novel aimed at older teens and young adults and is intended to inspire existential debate. They're like chalk and cheese, Kerry, sorry!  
}}
{{comment
|name=Sazzy1234
|verb=said
|comment= I loved this book. My friend gave me a copy of Lucas to read and i loved that, so when i saw this on the selves and read the back i was like...i want it!
I read it in a day, i couldn't put it down.
This is my favourite book ever!
 
}}
[[Category:Thrillers]]

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