Showing posts with label Amity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amity. Show all posts

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Insurgent (Divergent #2)

Just a warning. Don't read this if you haven't read Divergent, please. It'll make it a lot easier, I promise.
 
Title: Insurgent
Author: Veronica Roth
Series?: Divergent
Synopsis:
One choice can transform you, or destroy you. Every choice has consequences, and as unrest surges in the factions all around her, Tris Prior must continue trying to save those she loves, and herself, while grappling with haunting questions of grief and forgiveness, identity and loyalty, politics and love.

Tris’s initiation day should have been marked by celebration and victory with her chosen faction; instead, the day ended with unspeakable horrors. War now looms as conflict between the factions and their ideologies grows. And in times of war, sides must be chosen, secrets will emerge, and choices will become even more irrevocable—and even more powerful. Transformed by her own decisions but also by haunting grief and guilt, radical new discoveries, and shifting relationships, Tris must fully embrace her Divergence, even if she does not know what she may lose by doing so.
 
Why I read this: I fell in love with Tris and everyone else in the world of Divergent the first time around, so I wanted to pick up this book as soon as I heard about it!
 
My thoughts/Review:
This book picks up right where Divergent left off, starting with Tris's extreme guilt about Will and struggle with the loss of her parents. Tris's respite in Amity is short, however, and she soon finds out that Amity will not involve itself in the war. Soon after, Tris and the others head back to the city to seek the help of Candor and meet up with some unexpected friends. After that, everything goes to hell and we're even worse off than when we started. Get ready for the ride of your life. Relationships are tested, secrets are unveiled, friends turn enemy, and no one knows what the truth is anymore.
 
So, I loved Insurgent. Maybe it wasn't quite as awesome as Divergent, but it was only a smidge away. Action, conflict, just a sprinkle of romance, adventure, something new at every turn, and twists that I was honestly shocked about. I love how the book started off exactly where Divergent stopped. Most series skip a while in between books, and I'm glad this one didn't.
 
**
 
Tris- I love how she's so bold, and stubborn, and resilient, etc. She has to be one of my favorite heroines ever. She doesn't take crap. However, she's so secretive (i.e. not telling anyone about killing Will) that it destroys her from the inside out, and it destroys all her relationships, too. She gets to where she starts recklessly risking her life instead of really thinking it through like she used to. I mean, at least before she knew what she was doing when she risked her life. She's amazing and all, but still. That was unspeakably stupid of her to risk her life so many times without thinking it through--really thinking it through--and it's not really surprising that it's hurting the people around her. She thinks that they won't miss her a ton, that she's less important, but SHE'S WRONG. Argh! Why can't heroines ever get that through their heads?! I am glad that she seems to grow throughout the book, though, just as she did in Divergent.
 
Four/Tobias- So, by now I hope we all know that Four's name is Tobias, or else I know that you didn't actually read the first book. Four is as stubborn as always, but we start to see a softer side to him. He's willing to do anything for Tris--well, anything except putting up with her stupidly endangering her life, which I get. He doesn't wanna get hurt like that. He doesn't want her to get hurt like that. Four is so convinced that he's right, though, and his pride really hurts him. He starts becoming too naive, so much so that he can't tell when someone's trying to dupe him or not. And I don't know where he gets off lecturing Tris about secrets because he has secrets of his own. I'm glad that Tris points that out, too. And he's so misunderstanding of everything! Yes, Tris should've been more forthcoming, but she had her reasons, and the least he can do is respect her decisions and trust that she had reasons (no matter how stupid they were). Even through all of that, I still loved him. He's still really smart and stuff, just not smart enough sometimes.
 
Is anyone else even worth mentioning? I mean, yes, we have Marcus and Jeanine and Christina (who ends up being okay again at the end) and everyone else, but they're all secondary characters. I do feel like they're all real people though, not just flat characters. Veronica Roth has a way with her characters that I love.
 
**
 
I liked the role that being Divergent played in this book, and that we're finally kind of getting a little bit of what it means to be Divergent. There are twists and turns everywhere, and several of them I would've never suspected, especially the one at the end, but it was still pretty awesome all together.
 
I cannot wait for the next book to come out! I will be anxiously waiting until it comes out this October!
 
I give this book 5 out of 5 stars.
 
~Jessicah

Divergent (Divergent #1)

Let's tell a story, shall we?

Once upon a time, in a land not so far away, an avid reader who was obsessed with books and writing came across a title she did not recognize. This girl looked over the series once or twice, read a bunch of reviews, and
figured that it was going to be exactly like the Hunger Games and wasn't sure if she really wanted to read it or not. However, she had nothing better to do, so she sat down with her laptop and began to read it.


That girl (A.K.A me) was so wrong I feel like I should apologize to myself and Veronica Roth for even entertaining the thought at all.

I am sorry, Veronica Roth. I should not have underestimated your levels of pure an unadulterated awesomeness.

Divergent was an amazing and original story, not at all like the Hunger Games. Much, much better than that! Now, I'm not usually one for a dystopian novel, but this....this makes it work. The first line caught my attention... The rest of the book held it. It's that simple

"THERE IS ONE mirror in my house."
I was just like what? What just...? Who only has one mirror in their entire house? I have 3 in my bedroom alone! So, I kept reading.
"It is behind a sliding panel in the hallway upstairs. Our faction allows me to stand in front of it on the second day of every third month, the day my mother cuts my hair."
Um... Okay? I'm sitting over here, lost, trying to figure out if there's a book I missed and trying to figure out the math for the 'second day of every third month' thing.

But, fortunately, I soon see that this was a bloody brilliant way to open a book. It got my attention and held it. I wanted to know where this was going. It was pretty awesome. No book has ever done that to me before (and I've read a lot of books)


**

So, I'm hooked. In this dystopian world, there are 5 factions, and each of them represents a different thing: Selflessness, Peace, Bravery, Truth, and Knowledge. Every year, there's a choosing ceremony for those who are in their 16th year (you know, 16-year-olds). They get to choose which faction they will live in for the rest of their life, and choosing a different faction than the one that they came from certainly meant being cut off from their family. But before the ceremony, they take an aptitude test. A simulation. It shows them which faction they would be most suited for. Most people only get one faction.

People who get more than one are called Divergent. This is not a good thing to be.

Beatrice Prior's choosing year was this year. Her aptitude test... Well, let's just say it wasn't normal. Beatrice is from Abnegation--Selflessness. She's always had trouble with being selfless, though, which makes her decision even harder.

Eventually, she chooses Dauntless (Bravery). Which is awesome and all for all of us readers, but for her, it's like turning her back on almost everything she knows because they're so different.

Which just makes this story all the better.

I won't say more because I'll get things confused and I don't want to do that. It's easier if you just read it yourself and see. You'll know what I'm talking about.


**

Tris was my favorite character. She's so clueless sometimes, but I love that she knows her flaws and that she has certain limits (even if she doesn't respect them all the time). She knows what's up and doesn't take well to being mistreated. She stands up for herself. Seriously, every heroine EVER could take a few notes from her, because she really doesn't let anyone get away with pushing her around. She's pretty awesome all around, if I do say so myself. I really liked being in her head, seeing everything from her point of view.

Four was pretty cool. I really liked Four. And the romance between Tris and Four? I had no clue if it would come or not. Veronica Roth kept me hanging in the balance on whether they were really going to get together or not! It was refreshing, how she did the romance. It was really nice. I loved it.

Everyone else was okay, but Christina did get annoying sometimes...okay, a lot. Al's sniffling and crying was really annoying, too, especially when it's coming from Tris' point of view.

**

I really don't know what else to say about this book because I'm afraid if I say too much the dam will just break and everything that happened will come flooding out of me. Which would suck because I don't wanna spoil it for you. It's really, really good. It's one of the best books I've read in a long, long time.

It's pretty much awesometasticalerificexpealodocious (yes, it's my word. Yes, I made it up).

I just... These books... I can't even... Too awesome (which is weird considering I'm awesome incarnate but whatever)... It's like..


I am so excited for the next book! :D

I give this book 5 out of 5 stars (in case it wasn't obvious).

~Jessicah