Legend by Marie Lu
My 2 cents:
You have about six weeks to read Marie
Lu's breakout debut novel LEGEND, before
the sequel, PRODIGY, is released January 29, 2013. Temple Hill
Entertainment (Twilight) and CBS Films bought movie rights to LEGEND,
and there is constant cyber-talk about which actors will play which
characters. Will Kristen Stewart play June? Who will play Day, an
Asian-Mongolian-Caucasian teen boy? Will Marie Lu get her wish of Ben
Barnes portraying June's brother, Metias? Who will play Commander
Jameson? Angelina Jolie? Or Meryl Streep?
Enough talk about
the movie that is soon to be in the making. Let's talk about the
novel. First, no question, similarities abound between Legend and
Hunger Games. Like Suzanne Collins, Lu sets her novel somewhere in
North America's future. Both Day and June (Lu's central characters)
live in the “Republic of America,” which is in Los Angeles,
California, and is at war with the Colonies, the rest of the former
United States, apparently. The Patriots are rebels fighting against
the Republic within the Republic of America (California). Like
Katniss, Day is young, smart, extremely poor and has lost his father
to death. Like Katniss, Day has a younger sibling (Eden) he is
working to protect. Stealing a cure for Eden's plague pits Day
against Metias, June's older brother. June – privileged, beautiful
and brilliant - becomes Day's arch-enemy when the robbery goes wrong,
and Metias is murdered. In her quest to find Day, June makes a series
of startling, profound discoveries about the Republic and her family,
as life intertwines her path with Day's in unexpected, gripping,
can't-put-this-book-down ways. I actually started reading Legend,
looked down, saw I was on page 118, and couldn't remember how much
time had passed since I picked up the book. It was that engrossing.
However, my
12-year-old daughter found some parts disturbing. The interrogation
scenes are unpleasant and upsetting, and I skipped over those parts,
as well. Luckily, there were only a few of those scenes, and I
suppose they serve the purpose of showing how cruel governing
officials can be. Still, readers with sensitive hearts will find
those sections difficult to read, along with June and Day's
discoveries about the plague. Some readers will wonder if the book is
set in the time period after the Second Coming of Christ.
Particularly with all the references to war, rumblings of war, dark
and light, wealth and poverty, and extreme weather – five
hurricanes, flooding and earthquakes – in one year's time in Los
Angeles alone.
And yet, I find
the central theme of the book is love. How can that be, you ask? Fair
question. Three words, well clues, in way of an answer: Tess, John
and family. Not to mention the novel's central characters, Day and
June, who take turns telling their story in first-person narrative,
chapter by captivating chapter.
WORTH YOUR TIME:
Yes, if you're high-school age or older, and you don't get squeamish
at interrogation scenes.
Hi Readers,
ReplyDeleteIf you found this box, give me a shout-out so I know you found the full review and this box. THANKS, Kathy
Question for my readers who've read LEGEND and HUNGER GAMES by Suzanne Collins? Do you have a favorite?
ReplyDeleteHi Kathy -- I found this comment box easily, as well as your comments, of course. Love the new format -- Its a bit of a cozy reading room, eh? Goes well with your blog name :) My daughter was certainly a fan of Hunger Games, and as she as she becomes aware of Legend, I'm sure she'll be anxious to read it as well, interrogation scenes not withstanding :)
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