For the next installment of that very specific genre that I like so much, I read the first two books in the Divergent series by Veronica Roth (and I am very anxiously awaiting the third, and I think final book, so like, come ON already!) Divergent and Insurgent.
The setting: Chicago, a couple centuries in the future. The city has the same landmarks as we would find now including Lake Shore Drive, Navy Pier, and the John Hancock building, but the city is now surrounded by a wall and the population is broken up into five factions that each have a different set of values:
1. Candor-- the honest
2. Abnegation-- the selfless
3. Dauntless-- the brave
4. Amity-- the peaceful
5. Erudite-- the intelligent
On their sixteenth birthdays, kids must choose a faction. Most choose the faction they were raised in, or the one they "match" with according to some super high-tech virtual reality test.
Our protagonist: Beatrice, also known as Tris, who is raised in a very conservative Abnegation household but chooses Dauntless for her faction after her test results are "inconclusive". Tris, who starts out meek and without a clue who she is, slowly grows into an incredibly strong woman who, like both of her factions, is both brave and selfless.
The love interest: Four, an older member of the Dauntless faction who helps Tris find her strength. He is dark, tormented, dreamy, and mysterious... you know, the usual.
What's so dystopian about it? Well, across both books (I'll try not to give too much away here), Tris learns more and more about the different factions and discovers they aren't as peacefully coexisting as she once thought.
The verdict: As far as I can tell, this series has it all-- it's a coming of age story, has a strong female lead, the swoon factor is off the charts (in the first book especially), and has enough action (in the form of a revolution!) to satisfy anyone. I can't wait for the next installment!
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