

The first book in the exciting Bar Code series.Individuality vs. conformity. Identity vs. access. Freedom vs. control. The bar code tattoo. The bar code tattoo. Everybody's getting it. It will make your life easier, they say. It will hook you in. It will become your identity.But what if you say no? What if you don't want to become a code? For Kayla, this one choice changes everything. She becomes an outcast in her high school. Dangerous things start happening to her family. There's no option but to run . . . for her life.Individuality vs. conformity.Identity vs. access.Freedom vs. control.The bar code tattoo. Review: Well thought out story with a good cliff hanger - My daughter got this book from here school book club and I was intrigued by the summary provided on the book. We decided to read the book together and finished it in a weekend. Neither of us could put it down. The book provided many good conversations between my 5th grade daughter and I and the concepts were not over her head. The other nice thing for reader using the Scholastic point system is the book netted my daughter 13 points. Cheers. Review: Interesting First Book of the Series - GREAT Read! - I could not wait to dive into this book. It totally held my attention and was a truly scary look at a future that is not too far off the line. This author had some very detailed foresight and there were details that were mind boggling. I cannot imagine not having a choice but to get a bar code because of convenience ... and ultimate control. People may think that bar coding is a futuristic idea - it is not so far fetched! This book will really bring some insight into what a government will or attempt to do to each of us. It is fiction with an edge. Great read - couldn't wait to read the second book!
| Best Sellers Rank | #232,884 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #286 in Science & Technology for Teens (Books) #4,075 in Teen & Young Adult Fantasy #49,702 in Children's Books (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 520 Reviews |
C**N
Well thought out story with a good cliff hanger
My daughter got this book from here school book club and I was intrigued by the summary provided on the book. We decided to read the book together and finished it in a weekend. Neither of us could put it down. The book provided many good conversations between my 5th grade daughter and I and the concepts were not over her head. The other nice thing for reader using the Scholastic point system is the book netted my daughter 13 points. Cheers.
L**D
Interesting First Book of the Series - GREAT Read!
I could not wait to dive into this book. It totally held my attention and was a truly scary look at a future that is not too far off the line. This author had some very detailed foresight and there were details that were mind boggling. I cannot imagine not having a choice but to get a bar code because of convenience ... and ultimate control. People may think that bar coding is a futuristic idea - it is not so far fetched! This book will really bring some insight into what a government will or attempt to do to each of us. It is fiction with an edge. Great read - couldn't wait to read the second book!
C**T
Would you make the choice to conform?
"The Bar Code Tattoo" is a look at the dystopian world of 2025 - a world that mixes up ethical questions with the Biblical passages concerning the mark of the beast - Revelation 13:15-18. What would you do if once you turned 17 years old, you were required to get a bar code tattoo - or not be able to buy, sell, go to school, or ...? The protagonist of the story, Kayla Reed, has to decide which side she'll be on - tattooed or non-conformist. If she decides NOT to get the mark, things could get very complicated and dangerous. What information is contained within the tattoo? Why are people committing suicide after receiving the mark? Why is the government, controlled by the Global-1 Corporation, conspiring to get everyone tattooed? Kayla, her parents, psychic rumblings, best friends, genetic mapping, the Bible, Mfumbe, Zekeal, Eutonah - all are mixed together in an exciting look at "what ifs." The author was a tad bit ambitious on how much material to cover in a fairly short (252 page) novel. The book would have benefitted with some hardcore editing, weeding out a few of the possibilities and focusing her efforts on two or three of the primary ideas. Also, character development could have definitely been better. The characters were very one-dimensional and shallow. But, all in all, this is a thought-provoking book. It does make you question what your actions would be in similar circumstances. And it is frightening because it is too believable in these days of bar codes, scanners, debit cards, card readers, standardized European money, shopper's club cards, iris scanners, and so much more that seemed like total science fiction even 15-20 years ago. The second book in the series is The Bar Code Rebellion .
S**E
scary because it could happen
A new take on vampires, the downfall of society and one little girl. What would happen if an expedition, funded by the US Military, came across beings that could extend our lives but found out they were violent? Why we would find a way to use them as a weapon, duh.... And who better to experiment on then convicts? Until one day a 6 year old girl, abandoned by her mother, is kidnapped for the same reason. And what happens if these experiments were to get loose? Bye-bye society as we know it. Amy, because she was so young or is it because of what she is before the experiment, is different through Amy mankind might yet be saved. The Passage is book one in a series by author Justin Cronin. It had some issues, boy were there spots where this book dragged, and dragged and dragged some more. I wasn't prepared for the huge jump by about 100 years in the future, the transition was lacking. There were times I was so ready for the book to be done that I had to put it down and read something else. I felt a disconnect with the characters and have no desire to go and read anymore in this series. I just can not take book two being the same as book one. The dragging..... Did I mention the dragging? The last time a book dragged like this was "The Corrections" by Jonathan Franzen (worst novel EVER written, Oprah I despise you for recommending this book and hailing it as the great America novel or some such drivel. After the horror that was "The Corrections" I would refuse to read an Oprah book suggestion. *shudders*), that being said it wasn't nearly as bad as "The Corrections". I could have done without reading this book, but I don't hate myself for wasting my time reading it.
M**R
An interesting read.
I have definitely found this book interesting, though not my typical genre. I usually read romance/smut. But as I was going through books at home, I found the second book in the series and figured I would read the first so I could read the second and have it make sense. :-) While it is a future dystopian world, I don't consider 2025 to be very futuristic. Granted, the book was written in 2012 I believe, but that's still not looking forward very far. So I had a hard time imagining a world with a barcode requirement at this point. 50 years or 100 years into the future, sure. Because I'm not there to know better. But for it to only be 15 years out from the book being written, it just wasn't working for me since I'm reading it in 2023. But I will continue the series cuz I do find it interesting and I want to know what happens. The names are a struggle too. The spellings are odd. And Zekeal was terrible in the end! Definitely surprising. Yet, not surprising knowing who he works for. Either way, it's an interesting read and I will continue on to the next book.
T**Y
Nostalgic
I probably should reread this one to give a full review. I bought this one as a gift for someone because I remember loving it. Might update this review later after a reread.
B**0
My Relation to the Book
It went from an assigned school book to a book to read on a rainy day with no worries at all. At the very beginning it caught my attention, and all I could do is... READ! It is a great book for long car rides or just for entertainment. Throughout the whole story it kept me in suspense. The reason why I could retaliate to the book is because Kayla is an artist who wants to have a creative future, like me. There is really no description for it except suspenseful. The only thing I would change is the love from "gorgeous" Zekeal to "honest" Mfumbe. I can't wait to read the sequel!
A**R
Great start
I was referes to this book by a fellow reader. It reads fast and has some good character development. It took me under a day to read book one and look forward to the others. Hungry Games meets Divergent but on a faster timeline. Not super detailed but enough to keep you engaged. Oh also a bit like that Left Behimd type vibe with outdoor survival a bit. Not very often you get a book in the Upstate New York region as a setting but fits the story!
R**N
Ein Buch, das nachdenklich macht
Ich vergebe selten ad hoc eine Bewertung von ganzen fünf Sternen, aber diesmal ist das meiner Meinung nach gerechtfertigt. Nicht weil das Buch eine überragend gute Sprache aufweist oder innovative Strukturen (beides lässt jedoch wenig zu bemängeln), sondern weil die Thematik dermaßen aufrüttelnd ist, dass man nicht umhin kann, auch nach der letzten Seite weiter darüber nachzudenken. Im Buch wird darüber diskutiert, ob man auf den Bar-Code - ein Tattoo am Handgelenk, das alle Kreditkarten, Versicherungskarten, Patientenakten und weit mehr ersetzen soll - nicht schon seit den 1990ern zugegangen ist. Ob die Menschen so an Kontrolle gewöhnt sind, dass es ihnen auch egal ist, ob eine global operierende Firma ihr ganzes Leben von der Geburt an vorherbestimmen kann. Ob es letzten Endes darauf hinauslaufen wird, dass nur der überlebt, dessen genetische Disposition gut genug ist, das äußerste Extrem des Überlebens des Stärkeren. Eingebettet in eine gute Geschichte werden hier Fragen behandelt, die uns alle angehen, und die wir möglichst bald beantworten sollten; jeder für sich, aber auch öffentlich. Sonst stehen auch wir bald vor der Entscheidung: Bar-Code oder ein Leben als Ausgestoßene?
A**R
excellent read
very well written story line , really enjoyed this book
D**Y
My 13 year old daughter loved it.
I bought it for my 13 year old & she was hooked straight away. She has since recommended it to other friends.
A**R
Five Stars
I loved it.
1**E
All good!
Book for school, just what we needed
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