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The Bar Code 2-Book Set: The Bar Code Tattoo And The Bar Code Rebellion (2008)

by Suzanne Weyn(Favorite Author)
3.81 of 5 Votes: 4
ISBN
0439924243 (ISBN13: 9780439924245)
languge
English
publisher
Scholastic Book Clubs
review 1: This is the first book in the bar code duology by Suzanne Weyn. It was a very good book, with engaging characters and a fast-paced plot that made the book difficult to put down.In the year 2025 almost everyone has a bar code tattoo. It is not law yet, but most people get a bar code when they turn seventeen. At a few days to her birthday Kayla is trying to decide what to do; should she get the tattoo? See the thing is that her dad got the tattoo seven months ago and since then he has been a different person, depressed and miserable. Kayla wonders if the bar code has something to do with it. She ends up getting involved with a rebellious faction called Decode that is fighting against the bar code. Unfortunately the bar code is on its way to becoming law. The president of the... more US is part of the corporation doing the bar code tattoo and this corporation runs everything from the schools to the hospitals. What will Kayla choose? As she notices society getting stranger and stranger and notices more weird things happening to both the un-tattoed and the tattooed she is uncertain.Overall this was a wonderful book. The characters are engaging. The premise is interesting, and Weyn takes it to lengths that are horrifying and frighteningly realistic. The pace of the book is relentless, the action never stops and you are pulled from disaster to disaster. For such a short book there is a ton packed in here both in action and in thought provoking material. Has this type of thing be written about before? Yeah, it sure has. Just think about Scott Westerfield's Uglies series and you have an example right there (of course that was published after this book) another example would be the Tripods series by John Christopher or some of Neal Stephenson's works. Still, Weyn does a great job making the story realistic and has the story centered around a young woman which was interesting.I do have a couple pet peeves about this story though. These are mainly personal and of a technical nature. I have unfortunately worked with bar codes and RFIDs personally and I know that you can only hold a small amount of data on a 2D bar code like Weyn describes. With a little tiny bit of research Weyn would have known this. I realize it's a fantasy but it bothered me. The other thing that bothered me was the character's inconsistent technological know how. At one point Kayla says, "Send me your new web address, I'll e-mail you all the time." Okay, this is just odd I mean a web address is for a website, not to email someone. Really, you shouldn't screw that up in a sci-fi techno novel like this. The last thing that bothered me was when Kayla was at a house initially she was all worried about the government being able to track her computer use. Then later when she is hiding out with a rebel group, she decides to use the dusty old computer there. Then when someone tracks it she is, uh duh, I didn't realize that someone could track me here. Wow, that is just completely inconsistent!Besides the above complaints, I enjoyed the book. I just tried to shrug the techno inconsistencies aside. This is a quick read and overall an interesting and fun read. I wish the small inconsistencies had been fixed, then this book would have been spectacular. Still, I am excited to read the next (and last) book "The Bar Code Rebellion".
review 2: July Books #16 & 17: While these weren't particularly great books (and in a sea of trilogies it was disconcerting to have everything all wrapped up and taken care of in the last few pages of book two), they were very thought provoking. Personally, I don't feel like we're very far away from something like this. The United States has come up with a way of tattooing your information onto your body, thus negating the need to carry any time of identification ever. Need a loan: scan the barcode. Buying a snack: scan the barcode. Pulled over for speeding: scan the barcode. The U.S. is starting to force everyone to get one, but there are the usual holdouts and things get ugly real fast when it seems there is something sinister about the barcode. Successful people are suddenly being demoted or losing their homes or finding their health care cancelled. Long story short, it is discovered that when the barcode is tattooed, a sample of your blood is also taken and analyzed and your DNA is coded in there along with everything else. So, if you go to the Doctor, they scan the barcode and suddenly they know you are prone to heartattacks: DENY COVERAGE. Also and more sinister, teensy, tiny machines are injected during the tattoo. These machines are capable of causing bodily side effects that mimic illnesses and can cause someone to commit suicide, so if someone has a tattoo but becomes a security risk or starts discovering the truth about the barcode, the machines inside them are activated until that person kills themself. Luckily, a group of kids manage to figure this all out and disable all the machines, thus saving the world. less
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girly
Once again awasome book!!!!!!!! Most of my friends liked it!!!!!!!! Read it.
emily
So good, and I mean really really good.
sadz123
soooo amazing!!!!
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