Matched v. Divergent. V hunger games
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Matched v. Divergent. V hunger games
I was just wondering what everyone else thought about the situation, which is your favorite dystopian novel, and if you think the use of a dystopia is being over done. When books like this have the power to alter the way we view things, presumably our own government, it is good to collect insight on the matter. Thanks!
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I do think that these kinds of books help us to think about our own society in a new way. There is no such thing as a perfect society, but it is interesting to think about how to design one. These books can point out the flaws in our society by taking things to extremes. Divergent takes cliques to a whole new level, Hunger Games shows us about overindulgence in the way the people in the capital act, Matched shows the flaws of treating the human experience as one big science experiment, and Birthmarked shows what can happen when "helping" becomes control. As similar as these books are, they each make a different point, they have a different theme. I think that they remind us that even good things taken to extremes can be bad.
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Cause we think it's getting better
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Personally, I think the Grisha trilogy is the best out of these dystopian novels (you haven't read it yet? This is your formal invitation!), though I'm not sure any of the recent ones really make me reflect as much as the classics did, such as Fahrenheit 451. I feel like the problem with the recent YA-dystopian-female-lead novels we've seen lately is that the female leads <i>have to</i> have a love interest. I don't particularly mind that there is a love story, since that makes me feel the feels, but I think that the focus on the relationships does draw away from the emphasis on political commentary.
But hey- most of the classic dystopian novels weren't aimed at the YA group, so you could also argue that getting these readers to take a closer look at government in whatever form is laudable.
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