Download Free Audio Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1) Books

Download Free Audio Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1) Books
Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1) Paperback | Pages: 240 pages
Rating: 4.09 | 2447 Users | 302 Reviews

Present Books Conducive To Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1)

ISBN: 0545317010 (ISBN13: 9780545317016)
Edition Language: English
Series: Tomorrow Girls #1

Narrative In Pursuance Of Books Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1)

In a terrifying future world, four girls must depend on each other if they want to survive. Louisa is nervous about being sent away to a boarding school -- but she's excited, too. And she has her best friend, Maddie, to keep her company. The girls have to pretend to be twin sisters, which Louisa thinks just adds to the adventure! Country Manor School isn't all excitement, though. Louisa isn't sure how she feels about her new roommates: athletic but snobby Rosie and everything's-a-conspiracy Evelyn. Even Maddie seems different away from home, quiet and worried all the time. Still, Louisa loves CMS -- the survival skills classes, the fresh air. She doesn't even miss not having a TV, or the internet, or any contact with home. It's for their own safety, after all. Or is it?

Describe About Books Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1)

Title:Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1)
Author:Eva Gray
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 240 pages
Published:May 1st 2011 by Scholastic Paperbacks (first published April 22nd 2011)
Categories:Science Fiction. Dystopia. Young Adult. Childrens. Middle Grade

Rating About Books Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1)
Ratings: 4.09 From 2447 Users | 302 Reviews

Judgment About Books Behind the Gates (Tomorrow Girls #1)
I completely forgot to add this! It was really good and clean!

awesome book! it's definitely for middle grades. very good plot twist and plot! very well written!

It's half a book. Four young girls are bussed off to an exclusive private school in the Minnesota woods, and with the rest of their class, are taught things like wilderness survival and naturecraft. It's set in the backdrop of a mildly dystopian USA at war with a shadowy alliance. Of course, the school has more sinister plans. Unfortunately, it ends just as a normal book would start. The book sets up the conflict, and not too well. The character's aren't bad, and neither are the details, but the

Girls too young for the Hunger Games might give this preteen thriller a try. It didn't really hook me until then end, but I can see it being popular with the 9-11 year-olds who've been forbidden to dive into the brilliant brutality that this books YA counterparts offer. For adults: 2 stars in the beginning, 3 stars at the end just in time for the next book (simultaneously releasing). Lack of stars more for the writing than the story/plot.For kids: maybe 3-4 stars?Yay! for the Chicago and

in a sentence or so: since the war started, things have been very different for everyone. for Louisa and Maddie, they're shipped off to a secluded boarding school that teaches them about responsibility, writing without computers, and survival.Louisa and Maddie are best friends under the guise of being fraternal twins. in order to ensure they end up at the same school, Maddie's ID bracelet is tampered with and both girls end up at Country Manor School. as if getting up at 5:30 every day isn't bad

This book was okay. I was looking for an easy read, and this book caught my attention. However I felt like the characters were always complaining, and it got annoying. But I did like the overall plot of the book.A terrible war has broken out, and Louisa's parents have enough money to send her and her best friend Mattie off to a boarding school, which is supposed to keep them safe.Once there, all of the girls' electronics are confiscated, for their safety they're told. They meet their room mates

The characters were very real to me but there wasn't really a plot through most of the book. It was obvious we are suppose to think the school is evil but it sounds like an amazing place, environmental, focusing on people and personal strength rather than technology. Phys Ed is constructive teaching the kids the kinds of thing they learn at outdoor camp. I also did t get a very good feel for the War and what was really happening in these girls lives before arriving here. But it was a decent read

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