George Orwell wrote his classic dystopian novel back in 1949. Back then 1984 seemed a distant future date, it is now 31 years in the past. Writers are still inventing cautionary tales about future horrors and the present novel is one of them.
This is YA literature, dialogue driven, and easy reading. It grows on one as the story progresses proving to be above average in quality. It is also well-edited, something I’ve learned not to take for granted in E-Book Literature.
The plot includes possible betrayals, love triangles, teenage angst; typical growing pains. It also explores social pressures, conventions and mores. The pressure to conform, accept certain ways of looking at things and each other. And since the title is Uglies our sense of what is beautiful and normal. There is also enough action and adventure to create excitement and suspense.
The book also ends with major plot lines unresolved leading one to buy what must be book 2 to find out the resolution. I feel ambushed.
This is YA literature, dialogue driven, and easy reading. It grows on one as the story progresses proving to be above average in quality. It is also well-edited, something I’ve learned not to take for granted in E-Book Literature.
The plot includes possible betrayals, love triangles, teenage angst; typical growing pains. It also explores social pressures, conventions and mores. The pressure to conform, accept certain ways of looking at things and each other. And since the title is Uglies our sense of what is beautiful and normal. There is also enough action and adventure to create excitement and suspense.
The book also ends with major plot lines unresolved leading one to buy what must be book 2 to find out the resolution. I feel ambushed.
No comments:
Post a Comment