Showing posts with label red queen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label red queen. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2017

Book Review: King's Cage by Victoria Aveyard

King's Cage (Red Queen #3) by Victoria Aveyard
Publication Date: February 7, 2017
Genres: YA - Dystopian - Romance
Find it On: Goodreads / Amazon / iBooks / B&N / Book Depository
My Rating: ★★☆☆☆


Synopsis:


Mare Barrow is a prisoner, powerless without her lightning, tormented by her lethal mistakes. She lives at the mercy of a boy she once loved, a boy made of lies and betrayal. Now a king, Maven Calore continues weaving his dead mother's web in an attempt to maintain control over his country—and his prisoner.

As Mare bears the weight of Silent Stone in the palace, her once-ragtag band of newbloods and Reds continue organizing, training, and expanding. They prepare for war, no longer able to linger in the shadows. And Cal, the exiled prince with his own claim on Mare's heart, will stop at nothing to bring her back.

When blood turns on blood, and ability on ability, there may be no one left to put out the fire—leaving Norta as Mare knows it to burn all the way down.
 

About the Author:


Victoria Aveyard graduated from USC, where she majored in screenwriting. RED QUEEN is her first novel. She splits her time between Massachusetts and Los Angeles. You can visit her online at www.victoriaaveyard.com.







My Review:


I'll start this review by saying I have immense respect for Victoria Aveyard. She's the light of my Twitter Feed. Red Queen really floored me. And she grew up near my hometown, so extra kudos to her for escaping that.

But hot damn this series should not still be going.

What was once a story of Mare, an oppressed commoner-turned-princess-turned-rebel has become nothing more than a flimsy political story to whine about the two pretty white boys who are so in love with Mare.

As I was reading, I kept saying to my boyfriend, "Nothing is happening! But so many people have died! How can people be dying and nothing is happening?" Within the first quarter of the book, my favorite character died, along with a lot of other wartime bloodshed and mayhem, but it was honestly all to no ends.

The kingdom of Norta is at war, both with itself and with its neighboring countries, and King Maven is too weak to hold it all together. So what does he do? Spends 200 pages keeping Mare as a pet. We're told this is for political reasons, but if Mare wasn't literally saying that over and over again, I wouldn't believe it is. Sure, she's something of a figurehead, but is she the leader of the Scarlet Guard? No. Is she even particularly powerful? Not at all. The half of the book with Mare in captivity is nothing but Maven sticking his grubby hands all over Mare and her still kind of getting turned on by this. Oh, and she's tortured. Because she says she's being tortured. If we're talking gritty dystopia here and I'd like to see some real psychological torture here a la Kendare Blake or Veronica Roth. So you have to sit in a room doing nothing but reading all day? All right, sign me up to be a martyr for the next war! 

Cameron's narration with the Scarlet Guard was largely the only action happening, but there's a level of removal we as readers have because Cameron is so far down the chain of command that she never knows what's going on. Whenever there's a major fight or political move, Cameron more or less wakes up and is dropped into the situation. No buildup, no plot arc. One-and-done battle. Then we're dropped back into Mare's narration, never to see the fallout. In fact, I even had some weird timeline confusion within single chapters. There would be times where the Scarlet Guard would be talking about the mission and seemingly the next page they would be in the middle of it. Was there supposed to be a time jump, or did it make that little sense to everyone?

Characters were bland as can be. Mare, for all her "psychological torture" didn't grow at all. Maven is still Maven and Cal is still waffling between allegiances--what Mare sees in either of these man children is leagues beyond me. Killorn is all but kicked out of the plot. Cameron doesn't serve as anything but to further the story and Farley is the token badass chick without doing anything of note. In fact, the only saving grace character-wise is a few chapters of Evangeline's narration, and when you root for a character even though she's an offensively hyper-sexualized lesbian who supports literal genocide, you know you're scraping at the bottom of the barrel.

C'mon Victoria. Buddy. Friend. Step it up or let this poor series die.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Book Review: Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard

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Genre: Young Adult - SciFi - Dystopia

Summary: Mare Barrow's world is divided by blood—those with red and those with silver. Mare and her family are lowly Reds, destined to serve the Silver elite whose supernatural abilities make them nearly gods. Mare steals what she can to help her family survive, but when her best friend is conscripted into the army she gambles everything to win his freedom. A twist of fate leads her to the royal palace itself, where, in front of the king and all his nobles, she discovers a power of her own—an ability she didn't know she had. Except... her blood is Red.

To hide this impossibility, the king forces her into the role of a lost Silver princess and betroths her to one of his own sons. As mare is drawn further into the Silver world, she risks her new position to aid the Scarlet Guard—the leaders of a Red rebellion. Her actions put into motion a deadly and violent dance, pitting prince against prince—and Mare against her own heart.

Review: Aside from the acclaim, I picked this one up because Victoria Aveyard is a local author for me, so chalk one up for hometown pride!
I was taken by surprise by how much I loved this book! The premise seemed very typical: a poor girl who lives by thieving wants nothing more than to protect her best friend Kilorn (Gale?) and sister Gisa (Prim?) from the upper class Silver government. Just when she's at the end of her line--Gisa can no longer work and Killian is drafted for the war--she is whisked away to work in the castle, and from there she stumbles into a royal deception: that she's a princess.

Pretty typical, right? But Aveyard crafted a really intricate world with exciting characters and somehow managed to sidestep most cliches that she pulled up.

To fall back on the Hunger Games comparison, Mare's saving grace as a main character is a lot like Katniss: she doesn't want any of the things that are happening to her. When she shows up in court and [spoiler]. While she is passionate about the rebel cause and the lives of her people, the life of a princess and [spoiler].

Speaking of the princes, they were written well, too. Cal seems like he was going to be the all perfect love interest, but there is a balance between him being a genuinely good person and being the crowned prince of an oppressive ruling class. Major props to Aveyard for not taking the easy way out, because while Cal understands the struggle of the Reds, he understands that he as a future ruler can't go all out in resisting the current system which obviously creates some tension for potential love story.

Maven, Maven, Maven. I won't dwell too much on him except to say plot arc well handled. He's a really multi-dimensional character, and while I saw a lot of his story coming, it still created suspense and moved the plot along without *making* the plot happen, if you know what I mean.

I liked the Red Guard, but I wasn't as wowed as I could have been. Politically, they were great. Activists with a very specific goal and a code of morality relating to how they go about it. Just as far as characters, they felt very dropped in. Considering the role they played, the people themselves fell flat. Maybe they're more so setups for the next book? [spoiler]

Added bonus: These were some badass names without being tacky!

Obviously with my four star rating I cannot WAIT for the next book. With the way things left off, I honestly have no idea what's coming next and it's going to kill me to wait until 2016 to find out!

Rating: ★★★★☆