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Series: Defy the Stars (Book 1)
Genre: YA Science Fiction
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers (April 4, 2017)
Page Count: 512 pages
The Plot: The story held me through to the end. I didn’t feel like it lagged in any part, and I loved all of the traveling to different planets. I really like how the story flowed so the readers could visit each one.
The Characters: I really enjoyed the protagonists Noemi and Abel. By the end of the book I felt like I knew them as close as I would a friend. That really counts as good character development to me. Their details stuck with me.
The Setting: This is a space opera so there’s a lot of travel from planet to planet. Each places is very distinct. Kismet is very tropical and crowded, Stronghold very harsh and stiff, Genesis peaceful and serene, Earth decaying and consumed with modern conveniences, and Cray secretive and elite. I enjoyed going to every planet and I felt like I was exploring them along with Noemi and Abel.
Epic Things: There a lot of epic things in this book. I loved having the POV of a mech. I love machine point of views. I think they’re so interesting. A character was buried in a star, which I thought was so beautiful.
The Theme: I really like how this book tackled loneliness. Abel is lonely because he was truly alone in a ship for thirty years, but Noemi was alone despite being surrounded by people and I really empathize for that.
What We Can Take Away For Our Writing:
1.) Portraying Religion Respectfully – On Genesis, just about everyone is a member of a faith whether that be Christianity, Catholicism, Islam, Buddhism, etc. Noemi is Catholic and she often prays, but she also struggles with having faith. I love her journey though with connecting with her faith throughout the story. It was very unusual to see in a secular book.
How this can be applied to writing: This book really gave me more hope for humanity when it comes to religion portrayal, because I’m sick and tired of anyone religious turning out to be a crazy zealot. In most of what I watch or read that’s what happened. I only know a handful that don’t and most of them are because they’re Christian literature. I may not agree with all of the theology stated in this book, but at least it was done respectfully.
2.) Featuring Unusual Injuries – A character actually breaks her pelvis and I thought this was an unusual and rarely shown wound. The injury ends up having fatal implications, but I found it interesting that the author chose to use this sort of wound as opposed to a more typical broken ribs or cracked skull.
How this can be applied to writing: Try doing your research and having your character sustain more unusual injuries. The body can break in so many ways. 😉
Conclusion: I actually really enjoyed this book. It held my interest and I found myself reading more than what I planned. Five stars!
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