Publisher: Putnam Juvenile
Pages: 305
Source: Bought
Rating: 4 Stars
Last YA dystopian for a while, I swear. I have an incredible contemporary up next (Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell - perf).
Legend is a Young Adult dystopian novel published in 2011,
at the height of the dystopian frenzy. This, I think, is why it’s so original
and freshly-spun – because otherwise, it never would have survived.
The dual narrative follows June, the city’s prodigy, their
rising star, the only known person to have achieved a perfect 1500 in the
Trials (exams taken at the age of ten that determine your future), and
soldier-in-training, and Day, a fifteen-year-old criminal on the fringes of
society. When June’s brother and caretaker, Metias, is killed in action, June
learns that Day is the culprit. She’s accelerated to take Metias’ place in the
patrol – first mission, track down Day.
I wouldn't have bought this book based on the back cover
(it just didnt grab me) but the first page drew me in. Boiled down to its most
basic (“Someone kills family member, character departs to avenge their death”),
the plot is nothing new, but I think it’s interesting that it was put in a
Young Adult (and dystopian) setting, because I haven’t seen many of those
around, and the feelings and actions involved are different when the
protagonists are only fifteen. For example, in an adult novel a cop might seek
to avenge his wife, but here Metias acted as June’s parents (yes, it’s one of
those Young Adult novels where the parents are dead).
I was surprised at first to see that the book is so short, clocking in at only 305 pages, which very nearly dissuaded me from buying it. But it's extraordinarily fast-paced, speeding up as the book goes along. It's so tight that I could forgive how short it is.
(Ouch, practically this whole review has just been backhanded compliments).
Lu made it easy to visualise the world, which is good because I'm normally terrible at visualisation. Gritty details are left in there, and it's a very visceral read (as it has to be, because honestly the world-building might not hold up if I examined it too quickly).
The protagonists' ages are so unrealistic. Day's age was mentioned early on in the book but I missed it and was blindsided by it later on. Sure, they're both smart as hell, but the things they endure are just too much for fifteen-year-olds - or are we just used to 16 being the age when teens are out having dystopian adventures?
I don't want to analyse this too much, because I'm afraid I'll spoil my enjoyment of it. Let's just say that it was exhilarating and exciting, and I'm glad I bought it.
Grrr, why couldn't it just be a standalone?
I typically don't read dystopians so the fast pace of this one really helped. I haven't read the second and third novels yet though; I tend to constantly fall behind on series and agree that we need more standalones.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely, yeah. I did enjoy Legend but I'm probably not going to buy the sequels (ever), just on principle. It's silly but I'm sick of dystopian trilogies.
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