Ratings10
Average rating4.2
In the New York Times bestselling Unwind Dystology—Unwind, UnWholly, UnSouled, and UnDivided—Neal Shusterman thrilled readers with the story of a society that deals with its out-of-control teens by “unwinding” them—transplanting more than 99% of their bodies into other people.
In the latest installment of this sequence, Shusterman—along with collaborators Terry Black, Michelle Knowlden, Brendan Shusterman, and Jarrod Shusterman—explores even more aspects of a world that has accepted the unacceptable. These short stories examine the world of unwinding in a way we haven’t seen before, providing a fresh framework, new characters, and a different take on some events.
With UnBound, Shusterman’s fans can continue to get caught up in the world he has created in this “gripping, brilliantly imagined futuristic thriller” (Publishers Weekly, starred review).
Reviews with the most likes.
I've read most of the UnWind books, but hadn't gotten to this collection of short stories yet. They're all good additions to the books, and give a look into some of the things that the books didn't have the time to fully explore.
I thoroughly enjoyed these stories set yet again in the Unwind universe. Reading this was much different from reading other short story collections because no world has to be established. It just expanded upon something we already knew with more insight and background into the characters. Although I didn't remember enough of the books that every single small reference landed, I still enjoyed it very much. I had hoped to see more of Hayden since he is my favourite character, but alas.
Wonderful addition to the unwind series! It introduced some new characters and gave you backgrounds to so many old ones, even very minor ones. It answered a lot of remaining questions from the last book. The stories about the parts pirates were by far the best.
Featured Series
4 primary books5 released booksUnwind Dystology is a 5-book series with 4 primary works first released in 27 with contributions by Neal Shusterman and Michelle Knowlden.