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Showing posts with label sci-fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sci-fi. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2013

A Dystopian Review

“Slated” by Teri Terry
Rating: 4.5/5
Genre: YA, science fiction, dystopian literature 


Teri Terry really brings the thrills in the start of this new series. In a futuristic dystopian U.K, the government has a way of dealing with young criminals: giving them a fresh start. In other words, they slate them. Kyla has recently been slated, all memories of her past life—and past crimes—have been erased. After an entirely new family adopts her, Kyla is faced with the challenge of reintegrating into society, while Lorders (the new U.K. police), her new family, and other government agents watch her closely for any signs of relapse. And as if that wasn’t enough, Kyla is also forced to wear a Levo, a bracelet connected to a chip in her brain that will stun or even kill her if her anger or violence levels rise too high. However, Kyla is not like other slateds. She has the capacity to dream; she’s simply unsure as to whether these are her real memories or merely fantasy. She is forced to face loaded questions such as, “Why are innocent people vanishing?” and, “Who are the AGT (anti-government terrorists), exactly and what do they want?” With only she and her fellow slated Ben to rely upon, Kyla begins to peel back layers upon layers of mystery, endangering her own life, and the lives of those she has come to love.


This story has several strengths, the first being it’s world building. This is one terrible future that is frighteningly plausible. Teri Terry has created a stifling and repressed dystopia that is reminiscent of George Orwell’s 1984. Simply saying the wrong thing against the new Coalition can be cause enough for disappearance. Although the exact ways in which this dystopia came about are not fully explained, they are alluded to enough to make it convincing. 

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

The House of YA


Loge of Lies
 Book Review of Hover by Melissa West

Hover is the second book in “The Taking” series. The story picks up after Ari was taken to Loge when a neurotoxin was released on earth. Ari Alexander and Jackson Castello, the grandson of Zeus, must save the Ancients and the humans by trying to get them back to earth. However, this entails a dangerous mission that is put in Ari’s hands. She must kill Zeus, the ruler of Loge. Will she succeed or not? Will her relationship with Jackson make it through his secrets and lies?

www.goodreads.com
I read this book without reading the first one, except for the summary, and honestly was expecting to be lost in the book. I don’t mean being lost as in attention but as in not understanding. However, that wasn’t the case. Throughout the story I discovered bits and pieces from the previous book and was able to follow along clearly through the story. This second book was so captivating there is a lot of action going on and I was able to learn a lot about the world of Loge, including the unrest of some Logean people against Zeus.