"Elegant and elegiac, brooding but imbued with gallows humor, Shusterman's dark tale thrusts realistic, likeable teens into a surreal situation and raises deep philosophic questions. A thoughtful and thrilling story of life, death, and meaning."
-- Kirkus Reviews
"Shusterman is no stranger to pushing boundaries.
Scythe owes an obvious debt to
Unwind (2007) and its
sequels, and this succeeds as a sort of shadow companion to Patrick Ness' Chaos Walking trilogy: instead
of exploring the ways in which men are monsters, this deals in what happens to men when there
are no
monsters. When our reach does not exceed our grasp, when comfort is more easily obtained than struggle,
when our essential humanity doesn't burn out but becomes slowly irrelevant, what becomes of us?
Readers will find many things in these pages. Answers to such unsettling questions will not be among
them."
-- Maggie Reagan, Booklist, STARRED REVIEW