No people coming in, no people going out. No access to technology, which means a community who has no clue what’s really going on, but also knowing there’s something going on. What made this one really terrifying was the isolation. I also got more of a horror vibe from it, so unless there’s something I missed, the mention of of it being a dystopian tale makes no sense to me. I feel like that’s really misleading, because while there are a couple of things that could be seen as dystopic, the book is really more of the “holy crap, WTF is going on out there, is the end of the world really happening” kind of story. I will say that I didn’t really get the dystopic label up in the summary. The Hallowed Ones is a really different book! It’s definitely vivid, and it’s quite the page-turner. She smuggles him into her family’s barn-at what cost to her community? The suspense of this vividly told, truly horrific thriller will keep the pages turning. But when Katie finds a gravely injured young man, she can’t leave him to die. Amish elders make a rule: No one goes outside, and no outsiders come in. Rumors of massive unrest on the “Outside” abound. But the real world comes to her in this dystopian tale with a philosophical bent. Katie is on the verge of her Rumspringa, the time in Amish life when teenagers can get a taste of the real world. Genre: YA Paranormal Apocalyptic/Horror What It’s About: Published 2012 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt|311 pages
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