![]() ![]() I enjoyed her character in the beginning, but - per the story line - her personality changed with each book. I don't necessarily like the main characters throughout the series, but I appreciate the way they were written. I enjoyed the way each character is written. Not with the characters, but with the world itself. When I finished the series, I wanted more. There's the straight passage that gets you through the level's quickest, but there's also hidden areas for side games that you want to explore before you get to the end. ![]() To me, the worlds feel like a video game. A year after I read The Midnighters, I finally took Uglies out from the library with a sense of 'what the hell, I have nothing else to read.' Within the first few pages, I was drawn into a story of not only interesting characters, but a world I wish actually existed. I had read Westerfeld's series The Midnighters, but none of his other series. I suspected that - because of the covers - the books were the type of books I didn't care to read: stories of preppy, perfect girls and rejects. When these books first came out, I was reluctant to read them. ![]()
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