A Million Suns Book Review

“Eldest lied to you,” Marae says calmly, “because we lied to him.”

-pg 6

Book 1

A Million Suns by Beth Revis

This book was good. Let me tell you how good it was.

So last we saw Elder and Amy, they had just discovered that Godspeed, bound for a new earth deep in space, was not moving. They had also just killed the Eldest (the leader at the time), making Elder (who was next in line) in charge. The story picks up just a few months after the last one, with everyone desperate to find answers to their questions. How can we get off this ship? Can we get it moving? How long can we last out here? What will happen to us?

Moving along with perfect pacing, the story addresses issues of government, leadership, society, and also the laws of physics. That last one especially– if the revelations at the end of the last book had you questioning the author’s intelligence, don’t worry: it was duly addressed!

As for the other problems, well, I think they are what make this book so strong. Not many dystopias actually have the characters– and you– questioning the effectiveness of different forms of government. Is keeping your people content bread and games worth the loss of individual freedoms? To what extent does democracy work? And most importantly, what makes a good leader?

For each concept, we see both Amy and Elder’s reactions to their often different opinions on the subject. And I loved the way Revis wrote their actions. Because Elder is just a kid. He’s like 16 or 17. Amy is about the same. They are young, but leadership and impossible decisions are thrust upon them. They rise to the challenge with startling realism. They make mistakes. They don’t always figure everything out in time. Everything Elder and Amy did was so perfectly real and the emotions they conveyed poked at my heart. I feel like I really know them.

I was at times angry and frustrated with them, but in a loving kind of way. I am way too emotionally invested in this story. It matters a lot to me whether or not these characters live or die.

One thing I especially like about Amy and Elder is that neither is a particular stereotype. They are kind of regular people, whose opinions are derived logically from their positions and experiences in life. I like that they don’t always agree and I really loved the dynamic between them. Some romances were meant to be– but what really stood out to me was Amy’s questioning of whether or not she liked Elder because sheliked Elderor because he was the only other teenager on the ship. It was interesting to watch her evolve.

And while we’re on the romance, I would like to point out this book’s lack of convinient make-out scenes. They were never forced in to small places together or left alone for unreasonable amounts of time. Things happened very…naturally between them.

I’d also like to address the fact that Amy was almost raped in the last book (for those of you who haven’t read it, the scene isn’t graphic, and is handled with tact; it’s not a reason to forgo the book). She is still dealing with the aftereffects of that (because who wouldn’t?) and it does play a role in her relationship with Elder. I thought this was very important makes it makes this issue out to be, well an issue. It doesn’t trivialize it down to a plot trope. Snaps for Revis.

Another fantastic element of this book was space. Space is always cool, and I loved that Revis set her dystopia out there. It makes it so much more unique, especially because they are so isolated. A lot of times in dystopias, there is the dystopian nation and like random wilderness surrounding it. It doesn’t make sense– where did the other 5 billion people go? But here, it is carefully thought out. Almost like in experiment in human nature. And the way Revis addresses space, the fact that she makes it so beautiful and haunting, makes the setting even cooler.

Revis in general is pretty good at world-building. The scope of Godspeed is thought out nicely, with little details (like the way the people on the ship speak) that make her story believable.

If I had to choose one thing that really sealed the deal on this book for me, I’d definitely say it was the fact that a seemingly typical dystopian plot was subsidized by a stronger over arching goal– they were on a mission to colonize a new planet. This mission drives a lot of the mystery and secrets and pulls the plot along nicely.

As for the ending, lemme just say that I never saw it coming. It was brilliant. It basically reinforced my belief that this book most certainly did not suffer from the middle-book doldrums.

There was one more thing that I wanted to say about this book, but I can’t remember now because at 18 years of age I am apparently losing my mind. While I’m still lucid, I’m going to give you one last piece of advice:

Read this series.

Ri’s Rating:

QQQQ/QQQQQ
4/5


0. Couldn’t get past chapter one for fear of wanting to kill myself. Book induced suicide…

1: Yuck. Ew. Below Average. Probably didn’t even read the middle and skipped to the end.

2. Ok. Would’ve been better if I’d written the ending and everything else.

3. Not bad at all. Very enjoyable. Quite nice. Recommendable.

4. My kind of book. Near ideal, but something was a little off (annoying names, bad ending, that sort of thing).

5. WOW. Makes me wonder why people watch T.V when this is out there. Really liked it. Don’t expect to see this often.

6 and above. What I want my book to be.

Across the Universe Book Review

What does it take to survive aboard a spaceship fueled by lies?

-Cover

 Book 2

Across the Universe by Beth Revis

 

Okay. Can I just start off by saying that this book has a beautiful cover? The starry background is honestly my desktop wallpaper and will be until I die. Because it is awesome.   

On to the summary: Amy and her parents were cryogenically frozen and put on board the spaceship Godspeed so that when the ship reached the new Earth, they could be awoken to lead the people (her parents are scientists and military specialists). But when Amy is mysteriously awoken years before the journey is complete she finds that the ship is nothing like its builders envisioned. Not to mention other cryogenically frozen people are being murdered. Now stuck in a strange world, doomed to die before her parents are ever wake up, and forced to untangle the lies that ensnare the passengers, Amy must either put her faith in the ship’s future leader or watch as everything she has falls apart.

The future leader is a kid named Edler and between him and Amy the story is narrated. Though their voices are very similar, their characters are totally different and I found that the duel narration brought a nice fullness to the story because we got multiple points of view.

Amy, Elder and the other characters in the story are well done. Though Amy is probably the most fleshed out and realistic, but still. They were good. Elder falls in love with Amy pretty quickly, maybe because she’s different looking than their homogenous culture, but Amy doesn’t return the sentiments. And it’s not because she hates him, but because she doesn’t know him. Which I thought was an important aspect to their relationship. It would have been totally strange if she was all over him after almost being murdered because they are essentially strangers. They become friends at a natural pace and I think that renders this book an A+ in the romance category.

This reminded a bit of another book I read but I can’t remember which one exactly. I know that the dystopian thing is getting big in YA books these days, especially in the whole forbidden romance category, but I thought that this one was unique and actually quite interesting because it takes place in space; the setting allows for a lot of elements that normal earth-bound dystopias can’t feasibly have.

All these little bits and pieces allow for a full plot— the book is quite long. But I was never bored reading it because as soon as you think you know something it turns out that you were wrong and the suspense grows. I usually don’t like mysteries because I don’t have enough patience for them, but I actually found myself trying to figure this one out. The book isn’t all action, but it’s mixed with daily life scenarios and an exploration of the culture and workings of the ship that kept me interested and made the story believable.

The only bad thing about this was, unfortunately the ending. Well, not the ending exactly, but the climax. The most dramatic part, while dramatic, had a cheesy feel to it. So what happens is the villain is revealed, as you would expect it to be, but then he is taken care of by a friend…who instantly turns out to be a villain as equally insane. The quick dispatch of the first evil, followed by the sudden rise of the second makes it seem just…too quick. Probably it’s a mix of bad pacing and monologues for the sole purpose of explaining why the villain did what he did (really, there has to be a better way to do that), but the end effect is overly simplistic. Just…cheesy.

The actual denouement, instead of answering final questions, creates new ones that set the story up for a sequel. Which, I honestly think the book needed considering the circumstances and the immensity of the problems that the ship faced.

Considering that I thought this book was really, really good, I’m definitely going to be reading the sequel. This was, in short, an excellent debut and I can’t wait to finish the story.

Ri’s Rating

QQQ.5/QQQQQ

3.5/5

0. Couldn’t get past chapter one for fear of wanting to kill myself. Book induced suicide…

1: Yuck. Ew. Below Average. Probably didn’t even read the middle and skipped to the end.

2. Ok. Would’ve been better if I’d written the ending and everything else.

3. Not bad at all. Very enjoyable. Quite nice. Recommendable.

4. My kind of book. Near ideal, but something was a little off (annoying names, bad ending, that sort of thing).

5. WOW. Makes me wonder why people watch T.V when this is out there. Really liked it. Don’t expect to see this often.

6 and above. What I want my book to be.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 41 other followers