|  Erin Bowman has crafted quite a page-turner with her novel "Taken." Although 
	sprinkled with some cursing and very sexual innuendo, it is the action that 
	propels the story. Set in a post-war world, one group of military people, 
	led by a man named Frank, has contrived experimental communities. Readers 
	are introduced to the village of Claysoot on the eve of a Heist. All boys 
	are mysteriously "taken" from the community at the dawn of their 18th 
	birthdays. No one knows where they go, no one knows why. Some boys have 
	become so frightened of their future when about to be taken that they have 
	climbed the Wall that surrounds the village, only to be returned burned 
	beyond recognition the next morning. There have been no exceptions to the 
	Heists ... until now. Gray Weathersby has just lost his brother, Blaine, to the Heist. He finds 
	his life devoid of meaning. Even though he has a secret crush on Emma, the 
	daughter of the village healer, he has less than a year before he, too, will 
	be taken. Gray can see no reason to form an attachment that will only leave 
	Emma alone and mourning when he is gone. However, Gray has trouble just 
	accepting his fate, and after finding half a letter his deceased mother left 
	to his brother, he begins to ask even more questions. Could he in fact be 
	Blaine's twin, not a younger brother? Could he in fact have cheated the 
	Heist? That would change everything he had been taught his entire life. 
	 Gray decides to test his theory rather dramatically. If he should have 
	been taken and was not, perhaps he can also survive climbing the Wall to see 
	if he can live outside the confines of the village. What he had not planned 
	on was Emma following him. 
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			 Instead of the answers to the questions Gray and Emma are 
			searching for, they end up with many more questions about the world 
			they find outside. They encounter modern technologies for the first 
			time in the city of Taem, where the leader, named Frank, is engaged 
			in hunting down Rebel forces that want to topple his regime. This is 
			the only part of the novel that does not meld well in the premise, 
			as they both figure out the uses of these marvels too quickly to be 
			believable. As Gray encounters an execution in the town square, he begins to 
			believe Frank's answers are not the truth, and the Rebels are the 
			ones who are the victims. Frank seems quite interested in Gray after 
			learning that he is a twin. As Gray learns more about the Rebels and 
			experiments of Harvey Maldoon, the man Frank wants hunted down at 
			all costs, he knows he must now escape the city of Taem as he had 
			once escaped from Claysoot. Although the novel comes to a satisfying conclusion, its ending 
			is open enough to be the beginning of a series. With unanswered 
			questions about the other experimental communities and the love 
			triangle of Gray, Emma and a young Rebel fighter named Bree, readers 
			will be on the lookout for another section of the "Taken" story. Come browse the extensive young adult collection at the Lincoln 
			Public Library, 725 Pekin St., for "Taken" and other stories of this 
			genre. 
			[Text from file received from Louella Moreland, 
			Lincoln Public Library District] 
			Ms. Lou's blog:
			
			lincolnpubliclibraryupdates.blogspot.com |