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[TCN]⇒ Download Free A Girl Called Nine Valery Keith Books

A Girl Called Nine Valery Keith Books



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Download PDF  A Girl Called Nine Valery Keith Books

When Rand Matthews witnesses a little teen runaway attack a man in a diner, only to find her leaping out of his truck bed once he returns home to his ranch, he's at a loss. There's something strange about this girl, he knows, like she's been mistreated or abused. Worried about how the child might have gotten that way, Rand soon becomes determined to help her. As Rand and his ranch-hand Cole learn more about her and the events which brought her to the ranch, they soon realize that their new house guest is no ordinary girl....

A Girl Called Nine Valery Keith Books

Valery Keith sat down and wrote a story and presented a plot conceit that's been done ad nauseam. But because she has a knack for spinning a yarn, A Girl Called Nine is an enjoyable read and compels me to look up its two sequels.

It's Book 1 in Keith's Sentinel series. It's about a 16-year-old runaway girl who ends up hopping on the back of a truck of a horse rancher. Luckily for her, Rand Matthews turns out to be a good and decent hombre who doesn't freak out about the crazy things this girl can do.

This book isn't big on teasing the reader and holding back on key information. Readers know from jump that the girl, designated Prototype Number Nine, is the youngest of three girls - three genetically-enchanced test-tube children - that have been raised in a lab by scientists from Sentinel Biotech and trained and programmed to be assassins. After years and years of being subjected to ruthless experimentation, these three girls have survived where other children haven't.

It's not a book that dives deep into character work. It doesn't mine the psychological underpinnings of our characters. Oh, Nine has her hang-ups. She can't shoot puppies. She's afraid of being indoors for fear of being locked in, so we get scenes in which she sleeps on the picnic table outside and goes to the bathroom behind a tree. She's not much in the way of social graces. In fact, she sucks at social situations since she hadn't yet received the Pygmalion training before she beat feet. Traits such as compassion and morality weren't much part of the curriculum as it was deemed a more pertinent lesson for the operatives to learn to act first and think later.

It's a good read. I read it in one go. The author knows pace, knows how to ingratiate her characters with the reader. It's not a book that explores big themes in depth, and you feel the lack of it. To put it in filmmaking terms, this book is more a television movie than a summer blockbuster. The author doesn't press the urgency of Nine's situation. Ho-hum, she's at the farm, trying to fit in, and she's besotted with puppies and sort of likes horses, and maybe she can trust the kind rancher and his teenaged ranch hand Cole. And, as much as I ate all that up - because Nine's discovery of the joys of normal, everyday things is irresistible - I couldn't help but be thrown off by how the sense of danger feels so tamped down. Shouldn't I be worried about her safety? Shouldn't the stakes be more elevated?

It's refreshing that Nine - or Nina - doesn't have much of the angst that's bedeviled little girl assassins like X-23 or Hanna or Hit Girl or a certain Cat of the Canals. Nina is so dang likable. Shes an innocent. I love how infectious she is, love her sense of jubilation. But I also love how fiercely protective she is. When she has to, she's still very much the badass living weapon. I also really liked the rancher Rand Matthews who provides Nina safe haven and allows her to be a normal girl. I appreciate that this isn't a perv book, that there isn't some sort of Lolita element thrown in. Instead, Rand falls for a woman his age. And I like that there's no drama between that woman and Nina. They right away get on really well, and the woman gets folded into Nina's tight-knit family pretty seamlessly.

Nina does spring into action in spots. She takes on Cole's bullying big brothers and, later, mercenaries and agents deployed by Sentinel Biotech, a shadowy entity that you can't much blame for wanting their lab rat back. After all, Nine is "the culmination of decades of work and billions of taxpayer dollars." Only, maybe, next time, don't threaten a puppy when she's in the room? Anyway, I'm off to read Book 2.

Product details

  • Paperback 198 pages
  • Publisher Valery Keith (February 3, 2017)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1944535179

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A Girl Called Nine Valery Keith Books Reviews


This is a rather lightweight piece. There are some really astute philosophical points mazde, but the title character is very one-dimensional. The basic concept of gene-engineered and conditioned assassin children is not really developed, mostly seems to be a plot element for showing Rand as a caring conservative gentleman. As the story closes, not sure why there are sequels.
A super-soldier tale with a twist. Great main character development with the exception of the lab docs (could have spent a few more words on them). Fun to watch as Nine learns about things and interacts with a new world. Only problem is, they want their lab-rat back.
Interesting story, granted it's far from an original premise, but this one takes an interesting twist to the escaped super soldier/assassin story line. The writing is very good and the characters are interesting.
Characters whose motives are understandable and a plot that moves because of their authenticity...a wonderful, short read with people I cared about leading lives that are relatable. I wanted the hero to be rewarded, and the villain to be dispatched. If you sometimes want a rest from overly complicated plots where characters exist only because the plot does, you may like this book as much as I do.
Although the idea of genetically enhanced children is not new, it always fun to see a new take on it. This short novel was just that - fun. Nine’s (Nina) adaptation of her new surroundings were both exhilarating and exciting. The book is well-written and the characters developed. I especially enjoyed the talks Cole and Rand had with Nina in teaching her how to be a good person. Once Rand told her everyone has a right to their opinion and other people should respect that right. Some, in today’s society, seemed to have forgotten that.
I absolutely loved this book. It was easy to root for the seriously adorable good guys and to want the downfall of the bad guys.

I bought the book because I like this type of story and figured I'd enjoy it but I was surprised by just how much I did.

I just bought the rest of the series and then looked up the author and was delighted to discover that she's written several other books that look fun.

I like the author's clear and simple but vivid writing style very much.

She knows how to give enough information (without being overly flowery and wordy) for your imagination to kick in so the book can become a movie in your mind.

So yes...loved it and look forward to reading more!
When Nine is given a loaded pistol and commanded to shoot the cute little puppy. She is faced with a dilemma. She only has 2 choices. Kill the puppy or be put down herself for not following orders.

The obnoxious doctor in charge of her conditioning would surely kill the puppy AND have Nine put to death just like subject Six. What other choice did she have?

Maybe they shouldn't have used a loaded gun.

Such begins the adventures of Nine - Nina to her new friends - A genetically designed killing machine in the body of a 16 year old girl who really just wants a puppy and a real world life.
Valery Keith sat down and wrote a story and presented a plot conceit that's been done ad nauseam. But because she has a knack for spinning a yarn, A Girl Called Nine is an enjoyable read and compels me to look up its two sequels.

It's Book 1 in Keith's Sentinel series. It's about a 16-year-old runaway girl who ends up hopping on the back of a truck of a horse rancher. Luckily for her, Rand Matthews turns out to be a good and decent hombre who doesn't freak out about the crazy things this girl can do.

This book isn't big on teasing the reader and holding back on key information. Readers know from jump that the girl, designated Prototype Number Nine, is the youngest of three girls - three genetically-enchanced test-tube children - that have been raised in a lab by scientists from Sentinel Biotech and trained and programmed to be assassins. After years and years of being subjected to ruthless experimentation, these three girls have survived where other children haven't.

It's not a book that dives deep into character work. It doesn't mine the psychological underpinnings of our characters. Oh, Nine has her hang-ups. She can't shoot puppies. She's afraid of being indoors for fear of being locked in, so we get scenes in which she sleeps on the picnic table outside and goes to the bathroom behind a tree. She's not much in the way of social graces. In fact, she sucks at social situations since she hadn't yet received the Pygmalion training before she beat feet. Traits such as compassion and morality weren't much part of the curriculum as it was deemed a more pertinent lesson for the operatives to learn to act first and think later.

It's a good read. I read it in one go. The author knows pace, knows how to ingratiate her characters with the reader. It's not a book that explores big themes in depth, and you feel the lack of it. To put it in filmmaking terms, this book is more a television movie than a summer blockbuster. The author doesn't press the urgency of Nine's situation. Ho-hum, she's at the farm, trying to fit in, and she's besotted with puppies and sort of likes horses, and maybe she can trust the kind rancher and his teenaged ranch hand Cole. And, as much as I ate all that up - because Nine's discovery of the joys of normal, everyday things is irresistible - I couldn't help but be thrown off by how the sense of danger feels so tamped down. Shouldn't I be worried about her safety? Shouldn't the stakes be more elevated?

It's refreshing that Nine - or Nina - doesn't have much of the angst that's bedeviled little girl assassins like X-23 or Hanna or Hit Girl or a certain Cat of the Canals. Nina is so dang likable. Shes an innocent. I love how infectious she is, love her sense of jubilation. But I also love how fiercely protective she is. When she has to, she's still very much the badass living weapon. I also really liked the rancher Rand Matthews who provides Nina safe haven and allows her to be a normal girl. I appreciate that this isn't a perv book, that there isn't some sort of Lolita element thrown in. Instead, Rand falls for a woman his age. And I like that there's no drama between that woman and Nina. They right away get on really well, and the woman gets folded into Nina's tight-knit family pretty seamlessly.

Nina does spring into action in spots. She takes on Cole's bullying big brothers and, later, mercenaries and agents deployed by Sentinel Biotech, a shadowy entity that you can't much blame for wanting their lab rat back. After all, Nine is "the culmination of decades of work and billions of taxpayer dollars." Only, maybe, next time, don't threaten a puppy when she's in the room? Anyway, I'm off to read Book 2.
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