Book description
Spensa's world has been under attack for hundreds of years. An alien race called the Krell leads onslaught after onslaught from the sky in a never-ending campaign to destroy humankind. Humanity's only defense is to take to their ships and fight the enemy in the skies. Pilots have become the…
Why read it?
5 authors picked Skyward as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I’m not the biggest Sanderson fan. I like his books, but I don’t have a wing of my library dedicated to him. But Skyward in particular stands out to me. It’s a much more personal story.
Spensa is socially inept, misunderstood, and hot-headed. I loved that because I got to see her grow through struggle and failure like a regular person.
I’m not usually a fan of stories told in the first person either, but seeing the world through her eyes as she learned what courage actually means made the story impossible to put down. It reminded me that growth…
From Christian's list on flawed heroes who rewrite their own destinies.
This book is a Top Gun/Sci-Fi mash-up, and I absolutely love it. Spensa is the flawed female main character, and I adore how she spouts ancient warrior battle cries like it’s going out of style, and everyone else doesn’t quite know what to make of her. Spensa doesn’t think before speaking or acting and is so impulsive even she sees it and can’t do anything about it.
I love Brandon Sanderson’s books. He world-builds like crazy and gives his characters such a believable life that I fell into this one and had a hard time coming up for air.…
From Annie's list on flawed female main characters in war-torn worlds.
At the beginning, readers are drawn into an exciting world where humans battle to save their desolate planet from an alien race. But in typical Brandon Sanderson fashion, good and evil are not clear-cut, and the conflict soon grows far more complex.
As the series progresses, the main character, Spensa, discovers that the battle for her planet is not as straightforward as she had once thought, and that the aliens she had fought were neither uniform nor uniformly evil. When she infiltrates an alien homeland in Book 2, Spensa is forced to question her original assumptions about who deserves to…
From R.J.'s list on teens grappling with the line between good and evil.
If you love Skyward...
Brandon Sanderson is one of the most prolific writers working today. He’s also my single biggest source of inspiration as an author. He’s written everything from massive, tome-sized fantasy epics for adults to middle grade action-adventure.
With Skyward, a YA space opera set in the far future on an alien planet, Sanderson is having a total blast. You truly cannot turn the pages fast enough. Our heroine, Spensa, wants nothing more than to be a pilot, like her disgraced father (who was branded a coward after inexplicably turning on his flight mates). You see, for Spensa, getting enrolled into…
From Julian's list on sci-fi (and one non sci-fi) for young adults.
If you’re at all familiar with Brandon Sanderson, you may worry that diving into this YA work of his will require a significant amount of mental fortitude to follow. But unlike his high fantasy novels, Sanderson really dials it back in Skyward, making it an easy read with such fantastic dialogue that I laughed aloud repeatedly. Spensa is a curious, resilient girl, hellbent on redeeming her father’s legacy. Of the many AI’s that I’ve come to love in my sci-fi stories, MBOT is my all-time favorite and reason alone to read this book.
From L. Blaise's list on young adult soft science-fiction.
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