Book 1:
Divergent, written by Veronica Roth is set in a dystopian
future. What can I say? I loved the first book! It drew me in and left me
wanting more.
Beatrice is the main character. Her dystopian world is
divided into 6 separate groups of people (called factions) based on personality
traits and character. The Candor, Dauntless, Abnegation, Erudite, Amity, and
the factionless.
- · Candor are honest in all things.
- · Dauntless are the wildest and bravest.
- · Abnegation are selfless and help all the other factions.
- · Erudite are the most intelligent.
- · Amity are the peacemakers.
- · Factionless are unfortunate souls who have been cast out of their faction.
The story opens just before Beatrice has her Faction test to
tell her which faction she is best suited for. Despite the test results,
citizens are able to choose for themselves which faction they join. Beatrice
was born into abnegation.
It took a while to set up this story, introducing all the
factions, helping the reader understand where Beatrice is coming from and her
background. Once this is laid out and
Beatrice has made her choice, the action is non-stop.
I like how Veronica developed Beatrice’s character and illustrated
her conflicting thoughts on who others think she should be, who she thinks
should be. You can actually believe how hard her choice is when it comes time.
The supporting characters in this book are great too, very alive.
Beatrice shocks her family when she chooses dauntless as her
faction. “Faction before blood” is the rule so she must leave everything behind,
including her family. She even changes her name to Tris to begin her new
identity.
However, there were a few things I questioned as she made
this radical transition. Such as, how a girl who has never been allowed to run
can suddenly catch up with a moving train, jump on, and then jump off onto a
roof? She seems to possess super human powers from the beginning of her new life
as a dauntless. From that point on she practically becomes a ninja, as she gets
stronger, faster, more confident and better at fighting.
There was a little too much violence for my taste in this
faction and seemed a little twisted with the hand-to-hand combat partnering.
But the overall storyline and action keeps things fast paced and interesting.
Divergent is definitely a page-turner. It could have easily
been a single book ending where it did, leaving the rest to the reader’s
imagination.
Book 2:
Tris! What were you thinking?! This book sort of fell apart
for me. It was still a good read and jumped in right where the first book
ended. However, I was a little disappointed with the beginning. I would’ve
liked to see their small group make it farther in their journey than they did. This
story went a completely different direction than I thought it would.
Tris seems to lose her mind in this novel, making dumb
choice after dumb choice. Even her pain and guilt don’t fully make up for her
stupidity. And Four just turns himself in? What? Their relationship is so back
and forth in this book it is annoying. He loves me, he loves me not, he loves,
he loves me not….
I can appreciate that an author must make their characters
make bad choices to further the plot, but usually they are within character.
Tris is a completely different girl in this book
Yet, when I start a series I have to finish it. I have to
say, Divergent was so much better than book two! If you can stand not finishing
a series then I recommend you stop at book one.
The characters seemed much different in this book, and Tris
and Four are boring in this book. However, the plot still moves along quickly.
Book 3:
I hated the ending, I’ll just say that right off the bat. I
won’t give it away, but I prefer that a long book series have a happy ending.
Tris really bugged me in this book; she turned into a whiny brat instead of the
strong young woman she was painted to be in the first novel. She turned into a
selfish, pitiful character.
Four Trilogy:
Veronica then wrote several
short stories about Four after the main series, but knowing how the original series
ended, I have no desire to read any of them. If I had read these between book
one and two then they may have been of interest.
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