Reviews for The pretenders The similars series, book 2. [electronic resource] :

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

In this sequel to The Similars (2018), tensions rise as the villains reveal a ploy to exact revenge on the Ten and their families and ultimately take over the world.When Emma Chance returns to her elite boarding school, Darkwood Academy, for her senior year, things are different: Her best friend, Ollie Ward, is back while Levi Gravelle, Ollie's clone and Emma's love interest, has been imprisoned on Castor Island. More importantly, Emma is coming to terms with the contents of a letter from Gravelle which states that she is Eden, a Similar created to replace the original Emma, who died as a child. To complicate matters further, other cloneswho are not Similarsinfiltrate Darkwood, and Emma and her friends uncover a plot that threatens not only the lives of everyone they care about, but also the world as they know it. Hanover wastes no time delving right into the action; readers unfamiliar with the first book may get lost. This duology closer is largely predictable and often filled with loopholes, but the fast-paced narrative and one unexpected plot twist make for an engaging ride. As before, most of the primary characters read as white, and supporting characters remain underdeveloped. Despite its flaws and often implausible turns of events, the novel calls attention to larger questions of identity, selfhood, and what it means to be human.An overall entertaining read. (Dystopia. 13-16) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Emma's senior year at Darkwood Academy is better with the return of her best friend Oliver, but new love Levi (Oliver's clone) is imprisoned on an isolated island with his mad scientist father, Dr. Gravelle, who won't hesitate to physically or emotionally torture him. Although she feels closer than ever to the Similars, a group of student clones, none of them feel safe while Gravelle can do his worst. Then Emma makes a shattering self-discovery that could imperil them all. Fans of The Similars (2019) will find familiar faces and more of the same conflicts both internal and external in this duology conclusion. Plenty of action balances the occasionally overly introspective first-person narrative, and the end is a deftly handled twist on a twist that will confound readers in a good way. As with the first book, there are plenty of ethical issues to discuss, starting with whether or not readers would want to know if there are clones of themselves living in the world.--Cindy Welch Copyright 2019 Booklist

Back