Showing posts with label Pierce Brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pierce Brown. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Swoon Thursday (#98): Golden Son by Pierce Brown

Swoon Thursday is a hot meme hosted by the fabulous ladies at YA Bound!


- From the book you’re currently reading, or one you just finished, tell us what made you SWOON. What got your heart pounding, your skin tingling, and your stomach fluttering

- Try to make the swoon excerpt 140 characters (or less), if you are going to tweet about it. Use the hashtag #YABOUND when tweeting


This week, my swoon is from Golden Son by Pierce Brown!


We sit that way for must be an hour. Eventually, she kisses my shoulder, my neck, lips pausing along the jugular as it pulses. I move my hands to move her away, but she pushes them to the side and cups my face with a hand. 

"Let me in."

I let my hands fall to the bed. Her mouth crafts a warm path to mine.

- eARC, 84%




Ahh, Darrow and Mustang. This book has very few intimate moments, and this one is a crucial one in the book, short as it may seem. Love!

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Review: Golden Son by Pierce Brown


Golden Son by Pierce Brown
Book Two of the Red Rising series
Publisher: Del Rey Spectra
Publication Date: January 6, 2015
Rating: 4 stars
Source: eARC from NetGalley

Summary (from Goodreads):

With shades of The Hunger Games, Ender’s Game, and Game of Thrones, debut author Pierce Brown’s genre-defying epic Red Rising hit the ground running and wasted no time becoming a sensation. Golden Son continues the stunning saga of Darrow, a rebel forged by tragedy, battling to lead his oppressed people to freedom from the overlords of a brutal elitist future built on lies. Now fully embedded among the Gold ruling class, Darrow continues his work to bring down Society from within. A life-or-death tale of vengeance with an unforgettable hero at its heart, Golden Son guarantees Pierce Brown’s continuing status as one of fiction’s most exciting new voices.

What I Liked:

Reading Red Rising and Golden Son in three days total was an... interesting idea. I read Red Rising on Thursday, and started Golden Son on Friday, finishing it on Saturday. Literally over eight hundred pages... gosh, these books. I'm really enjoying the series, though I have had a serious feeling of dread and sorrow throughout the books, regardless of the tone of each successive scene. It's like I expect everyone to fail and everyone to die, in the end. I really wouldn't be surprised.

In this sequel, Darrow, now twenty, is now apprenticed under Nero au Augustus, the ArchGovernor and father of Mustang... and the Jackal. But Darrow has been cheated out of victories, and thanks to the slimy worm Pliny who advises Nero au Augustus, Darrow loses favor quickly, and Nero is forced to un-apprentice Darrow. But Darrow will not stop even without a fleet. His goal - take down the Sovereign, with or without help. He quickly realizes that he needs his friends, he needs to have many plans, and he needs to trust uneasily...

This book sort of blew my mind. Both books, really. It's truly amazing how Brown crafts the story, the world, the characters. Brown delves right into the heart and soul of war, or battle, of vengeance, of survival. He pulls out every great and terrible thing that comes with war. This whole book had an undercurrent of high stakes, danger, betrayal, endless battle. One spot of violence snowballed into an ocean. Brown really weaves a brutal and raw story of war. This is true dystopia, with all the blood and death and violence and terrible consequences.

You can literally see Darrow breaking down and falling apart and coming back together. Brown does a fabulous job of making Darrow a very, very realistic character at war. Darrow has always been a prodigy in terms of intelligence and cleverness and thinking, and he really used those qualities in this book. There were so many times when Darrow should have shut down, but he kept going.

Lots and lots of things happen in this book - I can't even begin to scratch the surface. It's a long book, but also very dense. A lot happens in a short space, as well as very little could be revealed in a long space. I love how intricate the plot is though. It feels like the skirmishes keep coming, the war never ending. When does Darrow sleep?!

It's so cool how Brown surprises readers with little things that he doesn't reveal until it's thrown in readers' faces. Like, this novel is written in the first person, but Brown writes in a way so that Darrow doesn't really everything to readers. For example, Darrow was doing something very sneaky and dangerous behind his friends' (and Society's) backs... and no one found out until he revealed it. NO ONE, including the readers. I thought this was really cool. I could see readers getting confused though, because it's like, did I miss something?! Nope, Brown is being tricksy.

In this novel, Darrow grows as a character, even more so than in the first book. The decisions he has to make - it's hard to fault him for withholding his plans from some friends and not others, or for having plan upon plan upon plan, or for threatening or manipulating some people. He thinks he's a terrible, and for his actions, he might be, but a true leader isn't innocent. Darrow learns to trust some - only to be burned by others, or drawn close. But Darrow learns some hard lessons. I feel so bad for him, during the entire book. 

The romance is weird, in this series in general. I have no idea what Brown is doing with the romance, and I can't see how he's going to end the series (in terms of the romance). It could go in a million directions, especially after this book - from start to finish. Mustang hurts Darrow infinitely, and Darrow has indirectly hurt her all along. Their relationship... it's so screwed up, like so many relationships in the real world, and I like this, but I don't know what to think!

I'm just going to say it - the book ends in a cliffhanger. Huge, giant, massive, colossal, heartbreaking cliffhanger. Typical sequel novel cliffhanger. I hate/love it. Hate because AGH. Love because AGH. It makes sense, and you know it's coming, but AGH. I need book three!

What I Did Not Like:

Just like in Red Rising, this book is long (even longer than Red Rising)... and it certainly feels that way. Again, I usually have no problems with long books. But this one felt its length (and then some). I felt like I read three books in the time that it took me to read this one. But this book is very dense, as is Red Rising. So it's understandable. And perhaps I wouldn't mind as much, if I hadn't decided to read these books during finals week. Hmph.

Would I Recommend It:

YES. I would totally recommend this sequel novel, especially if you've already read Red Rising. If you haven't read book one, then perhaps wait until closer to book three's release (hopefully in 2016 or sooner), because the cliffhanger in this book will wreak havoc on your heart. But seriously, this is an awesome science fiction series! Definitely one of the best dystopia series I've read (and I've read plenty). Perhaps because it's adult fiction?

Rating:

4 stars. Holy guacamole, this book. I think I'm still trying to process everything that happened. There's so much cruel craziness and then some good things and then more cruel craziness and everything is so interesting and I WANT MORE!


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Friday, December 5, 2014

Review: Red Rising by Pierce Brown

Review day! But first, the winner of the Exquisite Captive giveaway is Valerie! Congrats!



Red Rising by Pierce Brown
Book One of the Red Rising trilogy
Publisher: Del Rey Spectra
Publication Date: January 28, 2014
Rating: 4 stars
Source: Bought from Amazon

Summary (from Goodreads):

The Earth is dying. Darrow is a Red, a miner in the interior of Mars. His mission is to extract enough precious elements to one day tame the surface of the planet and allow humans to live on it. The Reds are humanity's last hope.

Or so it appears, until the day Darrow discovers it's all a lie. That Mars has been habitable - and inhabited - for generations, by a class of people calling themselves the Golds. A class of people who look down on Darrow and his fellows as slave labour, to be exploited and worked to death without a second thought.

Until the day that Darrow, with the help of a mysterious group of rebels, disguises himself as a Gold and infiltrates their command school, intent on taking down his oppressors from the inside. But the command school is a battlefield - and Darrow isn't the only student with an agenda.

What I Liked:

Wow! I've had this book on my radar for quite some time, but I didn't want to start the series until all of the books were published. For some reason, I had it in my head that this series would be a long one - but a trilogy really isn't that long at all! I definitely can see what the fuss is all about - this book is EPIC. Why did I wait so long to read it?!

Darrow is a Red, a miner of Mars, who was led to believe that the Miners were the foundation of society, the last hope. But it turns out that Mars is indeed livable (the surface), and the Golds are flourishing at the Reds' expense. Darrow is presented with the opportunity to become a Gold and destroy from within (more like it's thrust upon him, but meh). But the school for the Golds is not quite what anyone expected, and Darrow will have to fight for his life not only to win the game, but to survive.

This book covers a long span of time - two years, at least. Darrow is sixteen in the beginning of the book, a Helldiver, married to his childhood friend and sweetheart. He doesn't believe that the Reds are enslaved or less privileged, but his wife, Eo, does. Something happens and Darrow is sent to hang, but is rescued by a group of rebels. The group convinces Darrow to undergo physically altering procedures to make him a Gold (physically, mentally, intellectually). This takes months. Then he is sent to take the exams to go the Gold people school. When he reaches the school, more tests are administered... in disturbing ways.

Then, Darrow and the surviving Golds are sent to a valley... and basically, it becomes The Lord of the Flies, but worse. There are Houses named after the gods (Mars, Minerva, Diana, etc.), and only one House will remain standing. The goal is to enslave the other Houses (by touching what's called a "standard" to a person's head). One individual will become Primus.

Darrow begins his journey as a Gold with fire in his heart, vengeance in his soul. He wants to kill the ArchGovernor, punish the Golds. But when the game begins, and House Mars battles against other Houses and itself, Darrow starts to see some of the Golds as friends. His resolve wavers, because how can he kill all these Golds when they fight just as hard as he fights (as a Red) for his people?

This book is so deep, so violent, so dense, so heartbreaking, so bittersweet, so powerful. I can see why everyone is clamoring over this book. I think it's technically adult fiction, though Darrow is a teenager. The writing is very different from the writing of Young Adult novels. The content and subject matter seems more... mature, almost. Reds don't live long, so, at sixteen, it makes sense for Darrow to seem like an adult. Heck, he's married. 

I really like Darrow. He is extremely smart, observant, clever. He really is the perfect person to be turned into a Gold - he can adapt easily to situations, while keeping things into perspective. I liked watching his character grow, from naive and slightly cocky, to hardened and still slightly cocky. He is a born leader, and it shows, especially in the game.

The content of this book is pretty brutal. Murder, rape, assault, sieges, death death death... there is plenty of blood and gore in the book. It's definitely on a different level, if you were to compare this to a Young Adult novel.

The world-building is so complex and intricate and wonderful! I personally have not read a book too close to the idea and world that Brown has created. Then again, I don't read too much adult fiction novels. But. I found the world-building well-done and the setting very unique.

There is romance in this novel. I won't say more than that, but the progression and development of the novel is very well-written. I liked the romance a lot, especially seeing Darrow's reactions to the his budding feelings.

The story overall is capturing, as much happens throughout the book. In terms of large, major events, it's predictable (like, we expect Darrow to pass the exams to get into the Gold school). But it's the minute, small events that really make the difference. The climax and ending are pretty surprising in some ways. I liked the ending, especially for a first novel in the series.

What I Did Not Like:

This book is nearly four hundred pages, and it really, really feels like it (or maybe even longer). I hit about 40% and was like, seriously, that's all I've read?! It's not like the book was boring - not at all! It just felt sooooo long. And this is coming from someone who is usually fine with long books!

Would I Recommend It:

I definitely recommend this book, especially to futuristic, science fiction fans. It's a very popular book, but for good reason. Usually hype deters me. I liked this book though.

Rating:

4 stars. Good thing I have book two, Golden Son! Binge-reading commencing... the trouble will come when I finish that one. 


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