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I find it pretty much impossible to read YA books as an adult and leave the adult in me behind long enough to enjoy them. There are those rare ones that are written on two levels, a level at which the youth gets all they need and another in which the adult is also satisfied. This book doesn’t quite make that bar for me, even though it addresses some important issues and would make a great choice if you were teaching a class filled with nine and ten year olds.
Jonas is a twelve year old boy, living in a colorless dystopian world of regiment and sameness. There is no pain or unpleasantness here, nor is there any joy or morality. Choices are never made, rules are followed, without anyone feeling the need for more...for in fact, in this society, all feeling has been purged. Kind of made me think of Stepford Wives.
In order to be held, I expect a lot from a good dystopian novel. This is a good one if you are young, but, again, the comparisons are inevitable, and I’ll take Margaret Atwood’s Maad Adam series, thank you.
I suppose what it all comes down to, for me, is that I would rate this book quite differently depending on what the criteria were for rating it. If I consider it for what it is, a YA novel, meant for a young audience, and concerned with stirring thoughts and considerations among them, it would get a 4-star rating, easily. As an adult, it was less enthralling and more just “interesting.” I wouldn’t probably give it more than a 2-star rating. So, I have landed on a 3-star compromise, with a caveat that if you are a parent or spend time with children in the right age group, this would be a great book to read and discuss with them. There will probably be a generation of kids who grow up with this book as an all-time favorite and a feeling that it helped shape their lives.
Jonas is a twelve year old boy, living in a colorless dystopian world of regiment and sameness. There is no pain or unpleasantness here, nor is there any joy or morality. Choices are never made, rules are followed, without anyone feeling the need for more...for in fact, in this society, all feeling has been purged. Kind of made me think of Stepford Wives.
In order to be held, I expect a lot from a good dystopian novel. This is a good one if you are young, but, again, the comparisons are inevitable, and I’ll take Margaret Atwood’s Maad Adam series, thank you.
I suppose what it all comes down to, for me, is that I would rate this book quite differently depending on what the criteria were for rating it. If I consider it for what it is, a YA novel, meant for a young audience, and concerned with stirring thoughts and considerations among them, it would get a 4-star rating, easily. As an adult, it was less enthralling and more just “interesting.” I wouldn’t probably give it more than a 2-star rating. So, I have landed on a 3-star compromise, with a caveat that if you are a parent or spend time with children in the right age group, this would be a great book to read and discuss with them. There will probably be a generation of kids who grow up with this book as an all-time favorite and a feeling that it helped shape their lives.