The House of the Scorpion
User reviews
This book was pretty cool and interesting to read. The time and place of where the story takes place is what really got me interested. Along with the events the author put in the book. I would recomend this book to anyone who is looking for an easy interesting read.
The House of the Scorpion involves a huge variety of ethical, scientific, and emotionally inspiring events in the story line. This book is based about 100 years in the future where anti-gravity hovercrafts are the major use of transportation. The main character is a young clone of a large drug lord, Matteo Alacrán, who rules the land of Opium, the land that was created between the nations of the United States of America and Aztlán (formerly named Mexico). The United States has become much less appealing to the point that just as many people are crossing the border into Opium on both sides trying to run all the way through Opium, the country. Opium, the plant, has morphine and other addictive narcotics in it. The addictive chemicals in opium has made opium become a very profitable and popular drug and is now farmed and processed by eejits. Eejits are people who tried to cross the border, got caught by the border patrol of Opium, and had computer chips installed in their brains(because of the computer chips they can only do simple tasks like farming). Matt is the clone, and his sole purpose, known to all but Matt, was to become a heart donor to the original Matteo Alacrán. At the age of 148, the original Matteo Alacrán has a heart attack and needs Matts heart at which point a huge plot twist tells how Matts caretaker has been slowly drugging Matt so that his heart cannot be used as a transplanted organ. Matt is therefore no longer of any use, and is issued to be killed. Through a series of detailed events, Matt escapes and barely manages to cross the border into Atzlán. All but few look at Matt as a beast throughout this story whether it is because of being a clone or his political standpoint on the practicality of eejits allows him to have very few friends and a large amount of enemies with a lot of power over Matt. Matts life goes from bad to worse when over the border he is put straight into physical laboring. The heads of the laboring places also dislike matt because of his individuality. Matts ability to stand up to the heads of the factory causes a revolution in the rest of the workers and Matt has another attempt on his life because of the revolution. After the life threatening catastrophe Matt is saved by finding his true friend from his life before he left Opium. This friend has quite a bit of political power and so she made Matt go back to Opium as its rightful heir and destroy the drug producing empire. I really liked this book because it was more than just a couple of characters and a simple, predictable plot. The storyline had a lot of plot twisting events, and very complicated and detailed characters. This book was even better because it explored various disputes between religion, government, consciences, and other sorts of moral dilemmas.
The House of the Scorpion
by Nancy Farmer was a fantastic, wonderful, creative, unexpected, and
action packed book. I have not been reading books through lately
because of school and my short attention span, so I vowed that I would
pick out a bunch of books from the library and read them entirely. I
was a bit skeptical to start this book, but I am so glad I did. It was
about 400 pages long, but it seemed much shorter than small books I've
read recently(with boring plots).Matt is a clone, but he is no different from a normal human, except for the marking on his foot: "Property of the Alacran Estate"
and the method of his conception. He was born from a cow. Nobody wants
to teach a clone , so he educates himself along with the help of Celia,
his "mother." He makes friends with Maria, the only girl not scared of
him, and their relationship grows into something more as the story
progresses. The science part of the story was great. El Patron, Matt's
creator prolongs his life by taking his clones' organs(his body does
not reject them because it's his own DNA). His mind stays sharp by
using fetal brain implants. He controls his side of the world (Mexico)
by catching people going over the border and turning them into
eejits(humans with brain implants) causing them to not think or do
anything by their own free will. A master has to tell them to drink, or
they will thirst to death.
I
love this book and will definitely be recommending it to all of my
friends and family. It was though-provoking and made me think: What if
in the future, clones were made a reality? They would certainly be
discriminated against and treated as if they were inhuman. Clones are
very similar to Homosexuals in the fact that they both would be
alienated and made to feel different, when in reality, they are not.
Rating: 10/10
The House of the Scorpion is a fascinating futuristic book about a clone, Matt Alacron who shares the DNA of a powerful drug lord referred to as El Patron. Matt had lived in a small cottage, isolated in the poppy fields with Celia (his foster mother) his entire life. When Matt meets some kids, he hurts himself and is rushed to the Big House. He soon is informed that he is a clone. Just about everybody hates Matt because of the fact that he is a clone. They feel as if he is no different than a dog, he even was once called an Unbaptized limb of Satan by a priest! Matts only friends along the way are Celia, Tam Lin, Maria, and El Patron, the man Matt was cloned from who loves Matt as himself because he is himself as a child. Matt is educated and taught well. Matt finds out that clones are created as donors for the people they are cloned from. Later El Patron is near death and needs Matt to survive. Matt has to die in order to keep El Patron alive. The House of the Scorpion has numerous surprises and heart-pounding moments along the way. It is an amazing book and made me always want to turn the page for more. I recommend this book for anyone who like adventure books because this book really opens minds and I am sure that anybody who reads it will enjoy it as much as I did.
"The House of the Scorpion" is a book you will not want to put down. It is set in the future in the tiny strip of land between the United States and Aztlan(Mexico). It is called Opium and is run by a drug lord name El Patron, who is about 140 years old. Every so many years, he gets computer chips put into his brain to keep him sharp.
The workers in his fields are called eejits. They were once people, but now are as robots because of a computer chip put into their brain to serve his one function, harvest his opium. They can't even drink without being told. They are considered lower than animals and are fed on pellets.
A few years before, El Patron had a clone made of him for the purpose of a perfect donor when he needed an organ in order to stay alive. His name was Matt. Matt was raised in a house in the poppy fields by Celia, a woman El Patron knew. When he was four, an older girl and boy saw him through a window. They had a girl of Matt's age with them. She instantly befriends Matt.
When the three children turn to leave, he jumps out the window and is injured by the glass. The two children carry him to El Patron's house, where they fix his wounds and throw him into a room alone for six months because they found out he was a clone. When Celia finds him, El Patron insists they live with him. There, Matt is given a bodyguard and learns how to run the poppy fields. It won't be easy for Matt since he is a clone in a world where clones are regarded as something to be feared. There is much more I could tell you, but the rest you'll have to read.
I love this book because it's so interesting. You learn a little of the climate of Mexico. It shows how a clone may be treated in the real world. I like to read how brave Matt was and how he stood up for himself. The adventures he has are very interesting. It's no surprise this book won three awards.
The book begins in a lab where clones are being harvested. The doctor is about to remove the intelligence from the infant, as is customary with clones, when the nurse stops him. This child is to be spared from the practice and will keep his intelligence. The book fast-forwards a few years and we see the clone has grown up to be a young boy named Matt Alacran. Matt lives in Dreamland, a section of land between the United Stated and Mexico. Matt stays in a small house with a caretaker named Celia and isn't allowed to go outside. Celia has filled his head with the dangers of the outside world and Matt has to keep himself amused by watching television and staring out the window at the poppy fields. Matt desperately wants to go outside and play like the children he sees in the fields, but the windows in his house have been nailed shut and the doors are locked. Matt breaks the window to reach the children, but is cut by the glass shards and must be taken to "the big house" for medical care. The servants take care of him until it is revealed that he is a clone, the lowest life form. He is thrown in a cell and kept prisoner until his caretaker finds him and reveals that he is the clone of the most powerful man in Dreamland, El Patron, a 148 year-old drug lord/dictator.
El Patron comes to meet his clone and suddenly Matt's life changes. Although he is still loathed by the others, they now must be polite to him and give him the run of the house. He is showered with presents by El Patron and given music lessons to nurture his tremendous musical talent. He even has his own bodyguard, Tam Lin. Matt loves El Patron, a man who is known as the "Vampire of Dreamland," who is feared by everyone. One cannot speak ill of El Patron. There are even cameras in all of the rooms to prevent any sort of rebellion. But in the coming years, Matt learns the real reason that clones are created, to be used as organ donations. El Patron and many others use these clones to keep themselves alive and rejuvenated. Matt is convinced that he will be spared since he was the only clone allowed to keep his intelligence. Then El Patron's heart begins to fail and Matt's heart is his only chance for survival. Matt manages to escape and begins a new life where he learns the truth about Dreamland and the evil El Patron.
Nancy Farmer, a two-time Newberry Honor author, has written an excellent saga of the young clone who is shunned from society and despised and yet was so valuable to the most powerful man in Dreamland. Each of the characters is carefully woven into the plot and each has a story of their own which adds to the suspense. The complex tale takes many twists and turns as we learn about each of the character's backgrounds. Each clue leads us closer to the truth about El Patron and his drug cartel. While the story is complex, Farmer is careful to give the reader a list of all the characters and how they relate to Matt to avoid any confusion. She manages to take Matt from a naive boy to an informed man. This is an excellent book with suspense that holds you captive. It is a must read.
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