Life's hard.

It's even harder when you're stupid.

John Wayne

Showing posts with label dystopian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dystopian. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Into the Vampire City by Phil Tucker ★★★☆☆

Into the Vampire City (The Human Revolt)Kept me guessing!
Fiction – YA – Dystopian/Urban Fantasy
224 pages
Publication Date:  2012
Other Name: Vampire Miami
The Human Revolt #1

Selah Brown chooses to go to the only family she has left in the vampire controlled city of Miami when her father disappears.  Originally on the hunt for her father Selah’s course changes when she unexpectedly gets tangled up with the vampires and a unique gift she possesses reveals itself, putting her family and new friends in danger and even possibly starting a new Vampire War.

Right from the beginning the well-designed book-world and finely crafted characters shine through.  Selah is very dynamic and I found the examination of how people react in survival mode, either holding onto the humanity harder or going no holds bar, fascinating.  Also, having the story take place after things had settled in an uncomfortable holding pattern after the vampire wars was an interesting time to choose and gave the story a unique perspective.  The writing was not to my taste - I found it rough, raw and a bit crowded – but my love for the premise and plot overcame the writing and led to another late night trying fight off my obsessive need to continue the story.  Not only does this plot drip with potential for growth, but I never knew what to expect next during the whole story.  There was one very gross part that bothered me, but luckily it was short and the only one of its kind.  Thanks to www.bookbub.com I was introduced to another book I probably wouldn’t have found otherwise.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Matched by Ally Condie ★★★★☆




Matched (Matched, #1)

Questions and Choices
Fiction-YA-Dystopia
Reading level: Ages 12 and up  Gr 7 Up
369 pages
Published November 30th 2010
Matched #1
Literary awards:Teen Buckeye Book Award (2012), YALSA Awards for Best Fiction for Young Adults (2011), Publishers Weekly's Best Children's Books of the Year for Fiction (2010), Abraham Lincoln Award Nominee (2013)


The Society is infallible due to it being scientifically built upon data and numbers.  It always makes the right decisions for its members to have the most prosperous and fulfilling life or so Cassia has been taught.  But when she takes home her data card from her Matching ceremony to review the information on her ideal mate, Xander, Cassia sees another face, Ky.  Told to ignore the unusual glitch by the Officials Cassia, tries to focus on Xander, but once the possibility of choice is introduced Cassia can’t ignore what might have been.  Recklessly pursuing Ky, Cassia, starts questioning everything; the Society’s infallibility and their power over the members, where her heart belongs in spite of the data and whether she can continue down the life plan laid out for her or choose to create a new one?  All of these questions and the realization that she actually has a choice take her down a path she never dreamed of, but the real question is where she’ll end up.

I first picked up this book because of its intriguing cover; it caught my attention right away and drew me in.  And, though I found the premise very interesting it took me awhile to commit to reading it.  I always hesitate to read dystopias like Hunger Games and Divergent ( which was fantastic) so it came as no surprise it took me 6 weeks to choose to really start this one, but once I got started I had a hard time putting it down.

The writing has a nice relaxing almost hypnotic rhythm to it, with rich texture and lovely imagery, which I thoroughly enjoyed and coupled with the ability to keep my attention helped bump it up to four stars. There was a well fleshed explanation of the “Society” and enough justification of how it was meant to work that when it started to unravel you could understand how big the problems were.  Condie orchestrated everything in the plot and story very well.   She gave the right amount of insight into things happening outside of Cassia’s immediate world and balanced it with a great emotional journey not only for Cassia, but also the secondary characters of her family, Ky and Xander. 

Condie’s used Cassia to give a good understanding of the choices given up to the Society and how they are taught not to be thinkers, thus when she starts question things the danger she represented to everything the society stood for.  I enjoyed the different personalities in her family showing how the different people reacted to the rules.  Her father was an official who struggled to do what the Society said was the right thing, but broke the rules for the ones he loved.  Cassia’s mother was more rigid in her adherence to the rules choosing to protect her family by ignoring her conscience, but Cassia’s little brother was a rebel always flirting with trouble. 

Personally I’m not much into poetry, which is a fairly important element in this book, but I can understand in sterile world why people would crave beauty and the words would be so powerful.  Also while I like an element of romance for me it is never the main draw, but I think for someone who values it more they might get more enjoyment out of the story than I did.

I would like to address some reviewers’ opinion that this was just a rip off of The Giver by Lois Lowry.  I personally haven’t read The Giver yet, but it is on my list and I hope to get to it soon.  I just wanted to mention what some others have written so you can be prepared if you’ve already read The Giver.  As for my opinion of the issue I promise when I get around to it I will look at the two books for similarities and give my verdict on the review.

As for reading the next one, Crossed, I am kind of torn.  My curiosity pushes me to continue the story – even with terrible stories, which this one is not, I have a hard time giving up on them, but fortunately with age and a finite amount of reading time I am learning to be okay letting go- but the spirited dislike by reviewers on Goodreads for the second one is giving me pause.  Especially the comments about the huge amount of poetry in it.  For now I don’t have easy access to Crossed and have a lot of other books clamoring for my attention so the decision is made for me, but I’ll let you know if decide to pursue the book more vigorously in the future.

ISBN 0525423648 ISBN13: 9780525423645

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Divergent by Veronica Roth ★★★★☆

Divergent (Divergent, #1)


What would your choice be?
Fiction – YA –Dystopia
Reading level: Ages 13 and up
487 pages
Publication Date:  April 28th 2011
Divergent Book #1
Literary awards: ALA Teens' Top Ten Nominee (2012), Children's Choice Book Award Nominee for Teen Choice Book of the Year (2012), Abraham Lincoln Award Nominee (2014), DABWAHA Romance Tournament for Best Young Adult Romance (2012), Goodreads Choice for Favorite Book of 2011 and for Best Young Adult Fantasy & Science Fiction (2011)


Beatrice Prior lives in divided society where each faction holds a particular virtue above all others.  Candor (the honest), Abnegation (the selfless), Dauntless (the brave), Amity (the peaceful), and Erudite (the intelligent).   At the age of sixteen each person takes a test and then must decide which faction they wish to join and support.  Torn between her own desires and choosing the faction of her family, she must decide where she belongs and she hopes the test will help her make the decision.  But Beatrice’s results are both unique and deadly beyond her understanding.  With no help from the test, and told to keep the results a secret, she makes a choice that is even surprising to her. 

Renaming herself, Tris, she throws herself wholeheartedly into the competitive initiation trying to live up to the life and future she has chosen.  But Tris’ perfect world is unraveling around her and the conflicts between the factions are intensifying.  Tris’ greatest secret may have the power to save if it doesn’t get her killed first.

Okay I admit I am a writing style snob as any of you can attest to if you’ve read my posts.  I have very definite ideas of what I like and if you gave me a description of writing as straight forward and no frills I would immediately and passionately dislike it until my better sense of fairness caught up with me.  But in Divergent the straight forward style is a virtue.  I immediately took to this book from page one.  The writing was raw and not real big on detail, but the action and emotion was so absorbing I didn’t even notice and had no time to critique the writing with my usual vim and vigor. 

I had this book for about two weeks before I started it.  I was really nervous about reading another depressing dystopia book, but I shouldn’t have been.  Roth was cunning little spider weaving her web around me and reeling me in page by page, development by development.  I became so enthralled with the story as I read I really hated putting it down to go to sleep.  Sleep at that point seemed a waste of time compared to what was happening to Tris.  I fell in love with Tris and connected with her from page one.  Her vulnerability and yearning coupled with her strength was something I could identify with.  I felt like I could really understand her and her motivations.

Veronica Roth is a true talent.  Divergent was polished, deliberate and refined and all the more amazing for being a first book.  Roth has a real understanding of character development, storytelling and creation of a book world.  I see great things in her future and know this will not be the only series she does.  Now all I have to do is track down Insurgent, because my library doesn’t have it!


ISBN 0062024027 (ISBN13: 9780062024022)