![]() ![]() This doesn’t bother Thor and the other deaf kids in the state home, though. Because he’s a ward, no one wants to waste money buying him, or any of the other disabled wards, working body parts. Thor, a very good friend of Brooklyn, is deaf and uses “Old World Sign Language” to communicate. For me, it’s the disability representation that I love. However, this isn’t why I like this story. She also seems jealous of Risa’s talent for the piano. It follows Brooklyn, another ward of State Home 23, a bough who has a bond with Risa since they were kids. This is one of the few that takes place during the books, in this case, the second chapter of the first book, to be exact. ![]() I think, however, that it does world-building the best: All of the stories do this to some extent, but, as a person with a disability (PWD), one of my favorites is the second story, Unfinished Symphony. ![]() Though some stories are more entertaining than others, all of them do a great job of building on the world and answering questions the fans may have had regarding it and the characters within. It is an extension of the Unwind book series and is a collection of short stories taking place at various points within its timeline: before the main books, during them, and after. UnBound is a book of short stories by Neal Shusterman, with certain stories co-authored by Michelle Knowlden, Terry Black, and Neal’s sons, Jarrod and Brendan. ![]()
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