Prized (Birthmarked #2)

Prized (Birthmarked #2)

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4.05 of 5 stars 4.05  ·  rating details  ·  9,364 ratings  ·  1,114 reviews
Striking out into the wasteland with nothing but her baby sister, a handful of supplies, and a rumor to guide her, sixteen-year-old midwife Gaia Stone survives only to be captured by the people of Sylum, a dystopian society where women rule the men who drastically outnumber them, and a kiss is a crime. In order to see her sister again, Gaia must submit to their strict soc
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ebook, 264 pages
Published November 8th 2011 by Roaring Brook Press
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Clare Cannon
This is one of the hardest reviews I’ve ever had to write, both because the book left me heartbroken, and because it was so confusing that it left me quite exhausted. It is also difficult because I highly respect the author, especially for her openness to honest feedback, and though I disagree with some of the things in this book I continue to respect her and will eagerly await whatever else she may write. The other difficulty is that the themes dealt with are highly controversial, and yet they...more
Jillian -always aspiring-
It seems fitting that I devoured Prized on Valentine's Day as if it were a box of chocolate -- but this book was so much better than chocolate to me.

I don't think a book in recent memory has made me dread or hope as much as this one did.

Prized made my heart a knotted mess, and then slowly -- painfully -- the knots began to untangle and leave me even more stricken.

This book and its predecessor Birthmarked are so much more than run-of-the-mill YA dystopian novels. They are rife with important topi...more
Kyra
I became so attached to the first book when I read it. . . I absolutely cannot wait for this to come out!
Katy
I'm really giving this book a 3.5 (between liked and really liked) because I really did like it but there were a lot of things that bothered me about it.

THIS REVIEW WILL MOST LIKELY CONTAIN SPOILERS IN ORDER TO MAKE SENSE.

My biggest problem with Prized is I felt it was a totally different book from Birthmarked. None of the characters were the same. Gaia is supposed to be this strong young woman who stands up for what she believes. While she does redeem herself at the end, I found that she gave u...more
Dea Sauva
I read Birthmarked in March and couldn’t wait for Prized ever since. Imagine my delight when I saw the title on NetGalley! Everyone who knows me is fully aware that I’m a dystopian buff. Leaving whatever I was reading was such an easy decision when I found out that my request got accepted. All those months of waiting are definitely worth it! I loved Prized more than I did Birthmarked and I’m anxiously waiting for the last book in the trilogy.

Prized begins where the first book left off. After esc...more
Michelle, the Bookshelf Stalker
If the debut book in a series is even semi- good, I will continue with a series. I understand that it is hard for a debut book in a series to knock my socks off because you have significant amount of world building, and brand new characters to introduce. Usually, the plot is deep in the book and so I know patience is the key.

Why I wanted to read book 2 in the Birthmarked series?

I liked book 1 but I did not love it. I did like the 2nd half and because I thought it had potential, I wanted to see...more
Natasa
This review also appears on my blog, What Makes YA Beautiful.

Prized is a hard book to give a rating to that reflects its quality. On the one hand there are a few things that are very well done, such as the idea of a matriarchal society—truth is, I don’t think there are any YA books that explore this idea—and the gradual way Caragh M. O’Brien transforms Gaia from a headstrong leader into a submissive follower. However, there are some things that prevented me from giving it the five stars I wanted...more
Emily
"THIS. BOOK. SUCKED. I loved Birthmarked SO MUCH, and Prized just ground all those happy emotions into the dust. I said one word throughout the entire book, over and over again: Ugh.
But. Butbutbut.
There were... Some okay moments. But there is a lot of moral issues that bothered me, making it hard to continue reading... And the love square was just plain ridiculous. The fact that Gaia acknowledged that it was a love square made it all the worse.
And while I did enjoy the technical elements, and th...more
Aileen Shara
Apr 18, 2013 Aileen Shara rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: NO ONE. Please, save yourselves...
Recommended to Aileen Shara by: Oh...you stupid self. You stupid stupid past self who said "hey, look there's a second birthmarked! Let's read it!!" You idiot, you. Curse you, past self. Curse you...
Oh. My. Goodness.

Apparently I'm not safe anywhere from this freakin' epidemic of YA love triangles squares. And that's just the first complaint of many about this sequel. Welcome, welcome, one and all to the new face of young adult dystopian fiction: prostitutes and sex in the desert! First with the second Dust Lands book, (elsewise known as Rebel Heart....and we already know my opinion on that piece of trash...) and now with this thing...Ah, well. Let's take things as they come, shall we? We'l...more
◕ ◡ ◕  Arooj
*sigh* This book...I just did not enjoy it. At all. The first book was an interesting start to the series, but this book was not what I expected it to be.

First of all, this series doesn't sound dystopian at all to me. In Birthmarked I could have believed it, but not so much now. This world just doesn't make sense to me. I also didn't like how after learning so much about the Enclave, we now have to learn about another society. It was just plain boring. All Gaia did was sit around for weeks as a...more
Anja
it's three months since i finished this book, about time to rate and review o.O

in birthmarked, gaia left the enclave with her baby sister, and prized picks up were birthmarked ends. o'brien is briefly mentionig what happened over the weeks out there in the wasteland, there are no countless chapters of endless wandering and whining and starving, and that's a good thing. she's telling what's important with enough room for the reader's imagination.

well, wasteland... a stranger comes, finds gaia and...more
Alison
okay...so i'm giving this 4 stars, but i think it's more like 3.5. i rounded up because the last third of the book is what really hooked me...the first two thirds of the book, i wanted to smack gaia about 12 times - who was this girl??? she was not the same girl that we met in birthmarked. her actions, her thoughts...ugh...then leon - oh leon...wanted to smack him too - though a little less so...(upon rereading it, i really didn't want to smack leon at all...my feelings toward gaia were the same...more
Cici
The first book, Birthmarked is one of my favorite books! I really loved all the characters and coding and puzzles. I can't wait to get a hold of this book! :)

Prized is AMAZING! I LOVED it! It feels very different from Birthmarked (maybe because of the place setting and how Gaia is treated) but I loved it just as much. Definetly a new favorite.
Gaia Stone and her baby sister, Maya escape the Enclave with hope of finding a better life for them in the Dead Forest(Sylum).
Sylum, Gaia discovers is comp...more
Ambur
I absolutely loved the first book in this series, Birthmarked, so I was really excited to read Prized, and I wasn't disappointed! While the feel of the two books differs quite a bit, they both still have Gaia, and they both still center around some very amazing women...and powerful women.

In Prized, Gaia has left her home and is now in Sylum. Sylum is completely different than the world she knew before. First, the women are the ones in control, and the leader is a woman. In Sylum, women aren't on...more
Drottni
ahhh what happened?
where is the world and the characters I came to love and care for and was looking forward to read about...

-Gaia's character ended up just like all the other boy obsessed, selfish, and stupid female leads out there. Here was a character who was strong and independent, brave and resourceful, and smart. Suddenly she is weak and pathetic, stupid in her decisions, and falling head over heels for every guy that gives her a second look.

-Although I found Leon's abrupt character chang...more
Erin
Oh. Em. Gee.
Oh. Em. Gee.

First off, how much do I love Birthmarked? Very, very, very much. I looove Birthmarked. And Gaia. And (really love) Leon. And especially Leon. And so I was so. Very. Leery. Because a sequel is HARD to do correctly. Honestly. There are few successful ones.

This is one of the successful ones. I can't say much, for fear of spoilers. but suffice it to say this was flipping awesome. And if I can looove a character as much as I love Gaia--and I do love Gaia--and yet still disagr...more
Carien
What I liked about the first book, Birthmarked, is that there was no love triangle. This book however has a love square. And all the beard shaving! At least two beards are the victim of a razor blade.

Those things apart, this is a very cool read. I like the world O'Brien creates and I like how Gaia isn't some wonderteen as is the case with the heroine in many Dystopian YA books. Instead Gaia is insecure and afraid at times and makes some stupid mistakes. I really rooted for her to solve her probl...more
Anna
I really liked the first book in the series. As for this one... well... I'm giving it 2 stars only because it did raise many emotions inside of me - albeit all of them quite negative. Very negative, actually.

The main character here is a completely different person. She's whiny, selfish, weak and she makes you want to strangle her. I actually understand Leon quite well. Are there people saying he was "too cruel"? Well, I think he wasn't cruel enough! Frankly, Gaia made me want to spit into her fa...more
Mimi
I liked this book, but I found that it was too different from the first one. (view spoiler)[Gaia and Leon seem to have gotten new personalities and new moral codes which are questionable in Gaia's case (abortion decision). No matter where you fall on the abortion debate issue, I don't think it's a good thing to put in a YA novel. This is written and geared towards 12-17 yr olds and we're telling them that how you "feel" about a decision is what you should use to make a decision.

Gaia managed to
...more
drey
Sixteen-year-old midwife Gaia Stone finds herself outside Enclave, with a baby, heading off into the wilderness to try and find her grandmother. It’s not long before she runs out of formula and food, and when she meets up with a rider, she hardly has the strength to refuse when he offers to take her to his village.

In Sylum, Gaia finds refuge – of a sort. While women rule here, this matriarchal society may not be any better than the patriarchal Enclave. Both seek to subdue a portion of their popu...more
Shelf Talkers Anonymous
From the dessert to the water, Prized carries the brave and stubborn Gaia from the harsh world of the Enclave to the restricted settlement of Sylum. There the women rule everything from sexuality to marriage to crops, and Gaia will find even harder challenges before her: learning to compromise, learning to lie, learning to believe, learning to love, and learning to lead.

Compared to Brithmarked, Prized is a slower story. Though Gaia enters a society almost as rigid as the one she fled, here she i...more
Krysta Felix
Stunning, very thought-provoking book. One thing I loved is that the characters seem so real. They're very conflicted, often have trouble making decisions, and frequently question their conclusions. In short, they act like real people do. Another thing I really liked is that even though *spoiler* there are three possible love interests, they all make sense. To a large extent. I still don't buy how two of them got so attached in such a short time, but there you go.

I also loved Gaia's concern for...more
Cindy
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Cindy
I enjoyed Birthmarked and was pleased when I saw there was a sequel. But I was a little disappointed with myself for not writing a better, spoilerish review since I couldn't remember everything that happened in Birthmarked. I read many reviews and googled Birthmarked spoilers in hopes of finding something...and I came out with nothing. Still I refused to reread Birthmarked (I'm stubborn!). So I went in remembering Gaia, the birthmarks, her sister, her mother, the premise of the novel, but not mu...more
Kelly
“It isn't always easy between us. I admit that. But it's right between us, always.”
--Caragh O'Brien, Prized
Ok, SO...I am not a sap. I feel as if there is a part of me that is slightly a hopeless romantic but I'm also completely realistic and practical as well. With that said, while Prized (the second book in the Birthmarked series) has so much to it I have to say that the love square (yes you heard me right) was one for the record books. My heart and chest physically hurt due to the intensity o...more
Tricia
This book was very frustrating to read. After book one and the 1.5 where we see Leon's overwhelming love for Gaia, book two makes us want to grab them both and give them a hard shake. Gaia was especially frustrating. I found I couldn't like her anymore until nearly the end when she finally starts to think more rationally. Leon is about the same. I liked how Will and Peter pointed out to Gaia how they didn't understand how she could like Leon when he was always mean to her. The images we get are...more
Sarah
"Das Land der verlorenen Träume" von Caragh O'Brien ist nach "Die Stadt der verschwundenen Kinder" der zweite Teil einer dystopischen Trilogie, die sich hauptsächlich mit den Thema der Fortpflanzung innerhalb eines stark eingeschränkten Genpools beschäftigt. Während ich den ersten Teil überraschend gut fand und er zu einem meiner Highlights der letzten Monate wurde, ist die Geschichte im zweiten Band zwar immer noch gut, aber in meinen Augen leider doch etwas schwächer als der Vorgänger.

Inhalt:...more
Debbie Hantusch
While I enjoyed this one and found it as hard to put down as the first, in the end it was less satisfying. Part of the problem was that everything moved so quickly, perhaps because of being in the YA genre (character development and rising community tensions would have been more convincing if it had played out over decades, but then I guess she'd have aged out of the genre!). In the first book the character is a bit of a mouse, but here she suddenly has the confidence to take on an entire commun...more
Amelie
Zur Aufmachung

Dass das Cover hier orange ist passt sogar zur Wüste und auch diese hellen Schlieren könnte man als aufgewirbelten Wüstensand deuten. Wenn man es also so sieht, dann passt das zweite Cover sehr viel besser als noch das erste. Vergleicht man das aber nun mit dem Originalcover, dann kann das deutsche hier leider nicht mithalten. Allein, dass das Monokel hier abgebildet ist... Es hat einen Bezug zur Geschichte und ist zusätzlich auch schnell zu erkennen, weil es eher besonders ist als...more
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topics  posts  views  last activity   
Leon or Peter? 33 102 Jun 08, 2013 12:08am  
What's The Name o...: Girl is in a small town where women are ranked higher than men? [s] 3 150 Dec 17, 2012 05:59pm  
GAME Befriend, Marry, Avoid 4 22 Jul 19, 2012 09:19pm  
Prized (Birthmarked, #2)
Prized (Birthmarked, #2)
Das Land der verlorenen Träume (Birthmarked, #2)
Prized (Birthmarked, #2)
Preciada (Marca de nacimiento, #2)

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Caragh M. O'Brien is the author of BIRTHMARKED, a YA dystopian novel published by Roaring Brook Press in March, 2010. Born in St. Paul, Minnesota, Ms. O'Brien was educated at Williams College and earned her MA from Johns Hopkins University. She has recently resigned from teaching high school English in order to write full-time. For more information, visit http://www.caraghobrien.com.
More about Caragh M. O'Brien...
Birthmarked (Birthmarked, #1) Promised (Birthmarked, #3) Tortured (Birthmarked, #1.5) Ruled (Birthmarked, #2.5) Birthmarked: Chapters 1-5

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“It isn't always easy between us. I admit that. But it's right between us, always.” 32 people liked it
“She’d heard of love triangles before, but a love square?” 27 people liked it
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