Sunday, 22 March 2015
Divergent by Veronica Roth - Book Review
First Published by HarperColins in 2011.
Synopsis
Sixteen-year-old Tris is forced to make a terrible choice. In a divided society where everyone must conform, Tris does not fit in.
So she ventures out alone, determined to discover where she truly belongs. Shocked by her brutal new life, Tris can trust no one. And yet she is drawn to a boy who seems to both threaten and protect her.
The Hardest choice lies ahead.
In this book a world is imagined as a place where people are divided to maintain a peaceful society. Set in a future Chicago, people are divided into five factions, Abnegation, Erudite, Dauntless, Amity and Candor. Each faction expects its members to behave to a certain way, for example Abnegation members are meant to always be selfless whereas the Dauntless are supposed to be brave. Similar to the Hunger Games, Veronica Roth uses the story of a strong female character to spark conflict in a society of controlled liberties.
Tris or Beatrice is a sixteen year old girl who must choose her faction, either to stay at the faction she was born into, Abnegation, or to join a new faction. The problem is that during her assessment carried out in a simulation, Tris found out she was Divergent. Divergent are those who can make there own choices and later in the book you learn they can manipulate simulations, making them difficult to control.
This novel is a story about intense training, friends and enemies and some romance. As the book progresses more is revealed about the mysterious Four, Tris's instructor and lover. This book uses character development, along with world building to set the scene for hopefully and action packed trilogy. I am looking forward to reading Insurgent.
The best things about this book were the world building and the fast paced action packed story. The one negative probably being a slightly sluggish start due to a lack of knowledge about the world Divergent is set in. Like many novels which rely on world building, it is always difficult to strike the correct balance between world building and plot progression. Although the next two books are more like to focus almost entirely on plot and character development, though I am hoping for more information about Candor and Amity.
Rating 8.7/10
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