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Christina Loeffler's Reviews > Unwind

Unwind by Neal Shusterman
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really liked it

4 eerie AF, Shusterman does it again stars!!!

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This is my fourth Shusterman title to read in the last couple of months and man, this guy is KILLIN' IT - he just doesn't disappoint, time after time. Each of the worlds and scenarios he builds are so unique and vibrant that I'm consistently in awe of his imagination. Unwind takes place in a future where America has lived to see and survived a second civil war known as The Heartland War. Following the war, abortion laws are changed. Abortion is now illegal, but what does become the legal opportunity for parents who don't want their children is known as "unwinding" from the ages of 13 to 18 parents are allowed to sign orders to have their children unwound. The idea behind this, that makes it palatable for society, is that no part of the child dies, 99.6% of the child still lives on, as every piece of your baby, that you sent off because they're difficult or you didn't want them, lives on through another person.

We enter this story with Connor - he's a difficult son with a quick temper and a penchant for bad behavior. When he finds out his parents have signed orders to unwind him, he takes off, "kicking-AWOL" and tries running from the police to avoid unwinding. Along the way, he unwittingly saves a girl named Risa and a boy named Lev. Risa, a state ward was set to be unwound due to overpopulation in state schools and her performance just wasn't "up to par" for them to keep a space for her. Lev is the youngest child in a family of religious zealots and he is their tithe. If you're unfamiliar with tithing, it's the act of giving 10% of what you have to the church. Lev is the tenth child in his family, and they are sacrificing him to be unwound as part of their tithe.

Funny, but the Bill of Life was supposed to protect the sanctity of life. Instead it just made life cheap. 

I don't want to give too much of the synopsis away because there are a lot of interesting aspects here that I think would be incredibly riveting for most readers. What consistently strikes me with Shusterman's works is that everything he writes seems to be based somewhat in reality. His stories play on our worst fears, as individuals and as a society. I saw some reviews griping that this was too unrealistic - while I did have some of these feelings to start, the longer you sit with this and meditate on the things our society has already done then it doesn't feel quite so far fetched. Furthermore, I don't think Shusterman's whole point was to be totally realistic. The point, is to guide the reader in to pondering deeper topics and where you would draw the line, what society would be able to sweep under the rug and ignore.

"...One thing you learn when you've lived as long as I have - people aren't all good, and people aren't all bad. We move in and out of darkness and light all of our lives. Right now, I'm pleased to be in the light."

This book was creepy AF ya'll. My only issue with this, which may be my own fault because I've read multiple YA books recently (pretty much all Shusterman) but I had a bit of a hard time connecting to the characters and I felt their development wasn't quite as strong in this novel as I've seen in say... Scythe. There are some plot holes going on within this story, but I didn't find them overwhelming and they didn't distract too much from the overall story. However! Despite being a YA novel, this is incredibly dark and Shusterman does not wash away the darkness for the sake of a younger audience. While I don't want to give too much away, I will tell you that Shusterman writes the unwinding process from the POV of the child being unwound and that scene is going to stay with me for a very long time.

Unwinds didn't go out with a bang - they didn't even go out with a whimper. they went out with the silence of a candle flame pinched between two fingers.

In the end, it's the detail that gets me with Shusterman's work. I think I could write forever about how impressive I find the depth of his thought processes. There's so many small, fascinating aspects at play here that I never would've thought of myself. Along the way, Connor, Lev and Risa meet various people who shine new light on the unwinding situation and the way unwinding affects not just the kids being unwound, but the people receiving new body parts. There are characters here who retain their unwounds muscle memories, or their actual memories and have to fight to remain fully themselves. The intricacy at play here is another slam dunk for me and I'm truly thrilled to see what Shusterman does in the future, as well as reading more of his past works.

Would you rather die, or be unwound? Now he finally knows the answer. Maybe this is what he wanted. Maybe it's why he stood there and taunted Roland. Because he'd rather be killed with a furious hand than dismembered with cool indifference.

At the end of the day, I really enjoyed this novel. It was gripping and tense, but it wasn't one note and the depth of Shusterman's writing is what always strikes me the most. This is one I'd definitely suggest others picking up!
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Reading Progress

October 22, 2013 – Shelved
January 22, 2019 – Started Reading
January 25, 2019 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-15 of 15 (15 new)

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Karen ⊰✿ This was my first Shusterman and got me in the road to finding all of his books! He is one of the most interesting and unique YA writers out there. I’m so glad you enjoyed it!


Marina Great review of an amazing book. I read this almost a year ago and the unwinding scene still haunts me. I think the character Shusterman chose to go through that was genius. It's interesting that this is labelled YA fiction - I'm very far from being a YA and , in fact, was able to recommend this to my grandson , who 'enjoyed' it too. (If 'enjoyed' is the right word!)


BernLuvsBooks Well, I 100% need to read this! Fab review Christina and I have no doubt I'll enjoy this.


Christina Loeffler (Bern) Mom to 2 Posh Lil Divas wrote: "Well, I 100% need to read this! Fab review Christina and I have no doubt I'll enjoy this."

Thanks so much Bern! I love all of his work so far - looking forward to seeing what you think when you read this one!!

Marina wrote: "Great review of an amazing book. I read this almost a year ago and the unwinding scene still haunts me. I think the character Shusterman chose to go through that was genius. It's interesting that t..."

I'm not sure I'll ever forget the unwinding scene, it's definitely haunting. I also agree that his works transcend being "young adult" and are applicable to any reader - they just happen to be about teens.

Karen ⊰✿ wrote: "This was my first Shusterman and got me in the road to finding all of his books! He is one of the most interesting and unique YA writers out there. I’m so glad you enjoyed it!"

I totally agree! He really defies all the traditional YA / Fantasy tropes and I adore his writing!


message 5: by ☺️ (new)

☺️ Fantastic review Christina!! Never heard of this author before but I need to find this one, glad you enjoyed it 😊


Christina Loeffler ☺️ wrote: "Fantastic review Christina!! Never heard of this author before but I need to find this one, glad you enjoyed it 😊"

Thanks so much Jess! If you've never read anything by Shusterman I definitely suggest Scythe first! it is one of my favorite books of 2018 / ever - it was amazing!


message 7: by ☺️ (new)

☺️ Ooooow thanks Christina 💖


Olivia | Liv's Library Neal Shusterman is the BEST!


Christina Loeffler Olivia Long wrote: "Neal Shusterman is the BEST!"

YASSSSS 🙌


message 10: by Amanda (new)

Amanda Wow this one sounds interesting, I need to check it out! Great review!


Felicia Oh wow fantastic review, Christina 💖 I'm positive we read different books 😂😂😂


Christina Loeffler Felicia wrote: "Oh wow fantastic review, Christina 💖 I'm positive we read different books 😂😂😂"

LOL, to each their own! I'm all over the place with my reading! I'm currently in a fantasy binge right now :P

Amanda wrote: "Wow this one sounds interesting, I need to check it out! Great review!"

Thank you Amanda - it was super unique. I'd definitely suggest it!


Mary Beth Loved your review, Christina! I loved this book too.


Christina Loeffler Mary Beth *Traveling Sister* wrote: "Loved your review, Christina! I loved this book too."

Thank you Mary Beth - it's a good one for sure :)


Christina Loeffler Nicola wrote: "Great review Christina! 😊"

Gracias Nicola!


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