Publisher: Bloomsbury USA Children's Books
Publication date: October 2009
ISBN: 9781599905211
Source: Library
Lyn is the daughter of neo-gladiators and a "glad wife." Her life is governed by the rules of the Gladiator Sports Association. This becomes even more apparent when her father is killed in the arena by a young man who takes her dowry bracelet and her freedom. That act means that she must marry him. But when Lyn decides to take matters into her own hands, she must face a rabid violence-loving crowd in addition to the ruthless GSA. Can she survive and retain her freedom?
Things I Liked:
I like the way it pokes fun at the commercialized and televised world we live in. It's quite good (not that I have personal experience or anything) at showing life as a celebrity and how it is to live in the spotlight and have everything you do be visible and talked about. It was also an interesting commentary on our violent culture and what we find acceptable. And when the action does happen, it's excellent. Here is one of the interesting quotes about trying to be average:
At my fast-food nation job, it's really hot and you have to lift heavy boxes of frozen food substance and you get spattered with sizzling grease. But you have this uniform and this cap and you're just one of the underpaid and completely marginalized jerks like everyone else and no one asks if you come from seven types of men - you just fry and salt and squirt and slap and wrap and bag. p 32Things I Didn't Like:
I just wasn't that interested in the story, I think. Aside from the intriguing idea of neo-gladiator sports where professionals fight one another to the death, not much seems to happen in the story. The ending, while it at first appeared gutsy, didn't really satisfy me. With all of the building up and talking about fighting, there was only about 10 pages devoted to that. Too much of everything else and not enough of what I expected the book to be about. But, I suppose that is more of a problem with my expectations than the book itself.
Read-alikes:
I guess it's a little like the Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins, but really only in very broad ways
BOOK CONTENT RATINGS:
s-factor: !
remarkably few
mrg-factor: X
some implied stuff
v-factor: ->->->
while the scenes are few, they are fairly gory
Overall rating: ***
Posted as part of Presenting Lenore's Dystopian February celebration. Check it out!
If you buy through my Amazon linkage, I will get a very small percentage