Dystopias and Social Critiques discussion
What are you reading right now?
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Dustin
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Jun 12, 2011 04:41PM

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Watching him read that makes me want to pick up a good dystopian book since it has been a while since my last one.


This book is being made into a movie by Disney studios w/ Robert Zemeckis directing.

On another note, I picked up Lightpaths at the public library. It seems like it will do a better job than Dark Life did for me.

by John Marsden, followed by, not sure on the order, The Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan, The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness, and T..."
The Knife of Never Letting Go--and the whole Chaos Walking trilogy--is brilliant to infinity and beyond!

by John Marsden, followed by, not sure on the order, The Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan, The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick..."
brilliant to the point of infinity? and beyond? that's some pretty serious praise.


by John Marsden, followed by, not sure on the order, The Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan, The Knife of Never Let..."
Sooz, it's so true about the Chaos Walking series! I'm absolutely intimidated to review these books, because they are just THAT fantastic. I'm in awe of them!



Loved it, i think the tech stuff made it more believable. I truly enjoyed the big brother aspect of the story. Some of the teen stuff was annoying but did not get in the way.




Now I'm reading 2030, a rather recent (published this year) look into the future using real events that have happened. A different sort of dystopia, but it's all right.










And now I'm currently reading Feed by Mira Grant.

[..."
I just finished this also, and I truly enjoyed it, I thought it was a good spin on The Scarlet Letter and Handmaids Tale, and yes, it was way too close to reality for comfort. As all good cautionary tales are.
One, the idea of changing the skin color of criminals in order to avoid prisons is genius and appalling. That these people will be ostracized is given, and really is part of their punishment, should they survive. I can also see this going the other way, where gruops of Reds form mafias. Another cautionary tale there. And there is the Scarlet Letter reference.
However, a future where abortion is murder punishable as a crime is way too close for comfort.
I really enjoyed the story and it was though provoking also.

My suggestion: Try reading The City Of Ember Trilogy. Disregard the terrible movie that came out. I enjoyed this trilogy more than The Hunger Games. Much more original since it's not just ripping off Battle Royale. It's about a dystopian city that is underground with no access to natural light. The lights in the city are slowly starting to flicker and go out for longer periods of time. What are they to do once the lights go out forever?!

My suggestion: Try reading The City Of Ember Trilogy. Disregard the terrible movie that came out. I enjoyed this trilogy..."
I have read the first two books of this series with my daughter, starting the third. She is 10 and the first book was required reading for a class. They are pretty good. I am still anxious to learn, if ever, what caused the ruin of the US. But there are valuable lessons being learned, and even though it is YA and the antagonists are kids, it is a very good read.

The Unit, Never Let Me Go and now Ready Player One!"
[..."
I loved Ready Player One, I just finished it last week. It enabled a nice queue up to Divergent. I'm searching for the next thing after these two excellent books. I'm thinking about Maze Runner, but am not sure as reviews about the end of the trilogy are mixed. I've finished the McCarthy library, as well as several of the books mentioned here (When She Woke, Ship Breakers, The Passage, etc.) and am thus conflicted about where to go next.
Ideas?


I loved the cover and the blurb, unfortunately the story isn't up to much and I'm struggling to finish it. Not a lot happens other than the central character runs around worrying while gangs of citizens smash stuff up. It's just not written very well. Tucker clearly has ideas but I'd be inclined to come back in ten years and see what he's up to then.




My daughter just told me that she would be okay with being a pretty, even if she did become a bubblehead! How am I supposed to handle that? :) I think I need to re-read it.... also,



Have read the Hunger Games and The Uglies series and enjoyed them as well. Loved The Road--very bleak but beautiful since the father loves his son so much and the use of language...wow.
Any good suggestions?


I just finished


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