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The House of the Scorpion
by Nancy Farmer | Literature & Fiction
Registered by bookrabbit of Wilmington, Massachusetts USA on Thursday, September 02, 2004
Average 10 star rating by BookCrossing Members 

status (set by bookrabbit): reserved


1 journaler for this copy...

Journal Entry 1 by bookrabbit from Wilmington, Massachusetts USA on Thursday, September 02, 2004

10 out of 10

Read 12/04 - I enjoyed this book very much. I've passed it on to my son - hoping he will make time between homework and computer games to read it!

Amazon.com "Fields of white opium poppies stretch away over the hills, and uniformed workers bend over the rows, harvesting the juice. This is the empire of Matteo Alacran, a feudal drug lord in the country of Opium, which lies between the United States and Aztlan, formerly Mexico. Field work, or any menial tasks, are done by "eejits," humans in whose brains computer chips have been installed to insure docility. Alacran, or El Patron, has lived 140 years with the help of transplants from a series of clones, a common practice among rich men in this world. The intelligence of clones is usually destroyed at birth, but Matt, the latest of Alacran's doubles, has been spared because he belongs to El Patron. He grows up in the family's mansion, alternately caged and despised as an animal and pampered and educated as El Patron's favorite. Gradually he realizes the fate that is in store for him, and with the help of Tam Lin, his bluff and kind Scottish bodyguard, he escapes to Aztlan. There he and other "lost children" are trapped in a more subtle kind of slavery before Matt can return to Opium to take his rightful place and transform his country." 




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