Search This Blog







2025 Cover Lovers Reading Challenge (hosted by Yours Truly)

2025 Literary Escapes Challenge
- Alabama
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California (2)
- Colorado (3)
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- Florida (1)
- Georgia (1)
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa (2)
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine (1)
- Maryland
- Massachusetts (1)
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New York (4)
- North Carolina (2)
- North Dakota
- Ohio (1)
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island (1)
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Tennessee
- Texas (1)
- Utah
- Vermont (2)
- Virginia (2)
- Washington (1)
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin (1)
- Wyoming
- Washington, D.C.* (1)
International:
- Australia (2)
- Canada (1)
- England (5)
- France (1)
- Puerto Rico (1)
- Scotland (1)


2025 POPSUGAR Reading Challenge



2025 Build Your Library Reading Challenge









Saturday, September 08, 2012
And It Could Have Been So Intriguing ...
1:00 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
After years of war and chaos, things in the U.S. have finally settled down. As long as citizens comply with the Moral Statutes—new laws governing everything from what people can read to how they're allowed to dress to which religion they're able to practice—they're safe. Breaking the rules means paying a hefty fine, being sent to prison, or worse. If soldiers from the Federal Bureau of Reformation (FBR) take you away, chances are you'll never be heard from again.
Seventeen-year-old Ember Miller's seen enough people disappear to know how serious the government is about upholding the laws, no matter how ridiculously strict they may be. So, she does her best to stay under the radar, doing nothing that might draw the FBR's attention to her and her rebellious single mother. It's not easy. In fact, it's impossible. Soldiers soon arrest Ember's mother for violating Article 5 (having children out of wedlock). Now a piece of government property, Ember's taken to a girl's reformatory run by an anti-feminist group called the Sisters of Salvation. She knows she can't stay there, knows she has to escape and find her mother—but how? No one's ever made it out of the reformatory before aging out at 18. Not alive, anyway. Maybe she won't survive an escape attempt either, but she has to try.
As Ember battles the brutal soldiers of a fanatical government, she'll have to decide who to trust and what to risk in order to save herself and her mother.
Article 5, the first book in a new YA dystopian trilogy by newcomer Kristen Simmons, offers a premise with some unique possibilities. Unfortunately, the book leaves most of those unexplored, focusing instead on Ember's incarceration and subsequent flight across several states. So many YA dystopians have this exact plot that it makes Article 5 feel dull and unoriginal. Intriguing characters can often save the day in such novels, but not in this one—Ember's whiny, selfish and irritatingly naive. The rest of the cast are flat and/or stereotypical. All in all, Article 5 disappointed me. I was hoping for something unique and, although the story could have gone in some interesting directions, it just didn't. Maybe subsequent books will, but I don't think I'll be sticking with this series long enough to find out.
(Readalikes: Reminds me of Eve by Anna Carey, as well as Ashfall and Ashen Winter by Mike Mullin)
Grade: C
If this were a movie, it would be rate: PG-13 for language (no F-bombs), violence and mild sexual innuendo/content
To the FTC, with love: I received a finished copy of Article 5 from the generous folks at Tor Teen (a division of Tor/Forge). Thank you!
As Ember battles the brutal soldiers of a fanatical government, she'll have to decide who to trust and what to risk in order to save herself and her mother.
Article 5, the first book in a new YA dystopian trilogy by newcomer Kristen Simmons, offers a premise with some unique possibilities. Unfortunately, the book leaves most of those unexplored, focusing instead on Ember's incarceration and subsequent flight across several states. So many YA dystopians have this exact plot that it makes Article 5 feel dull and unoriginal. Intriguing characters can often save the day in such novels, but not in this one—Ember's whiny, selfish and irritatingly naive. The rest of the cast are flat and/or stereotypical. All in all, Article 5 disappointed me. I was hoping for something unique and, although the story could have gone in some interesting directions, it just didn't. Maybe subsequent books will, but I don't think I'll be sticking with this series long enough to find out.
(Readalikes: Reminds me of Eve by Anna Carey, as well as Ashfall and Ashen Winter by Mike Mullin)
Grade: C
If this were a movie, it would be rate: PG-13 for language (no F-bombs), violence and mild sexual innuendo/content
To the FTC, with love: I received a finished copy of Article 5 from the generous folks at Tor Teen (a division of Tor/Forge). Thank you!
1 comment:
Comments make me feel special, so go crazy! Just keep it clean and civil. Feel free to speak your mind (I always do), but be aware that I will delete any offensive comments.
P.S.: Don't panic if your comment doesn't show up right away. I have to approve each one before it posts to prevent spam. It's annoying, but it works!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(Atom)


Reading
Finlay Donovan Is Killing It by Elle Cosimano

Listening
If Walls Could Talk by Juliet Blackwell


Followin' with Bloglovin'

-
Heartwood by Amity Gaige10 minutes ago
-
-
-
34. Dead Happy5 hours ago
-
Top Ten Tuesday ~ Foolish Books7 hours ago
-
Bookish Travel: March 20257 hours ago
-
Fear Stalks The Village by Ethel Lina White10 hours ago
-
-
-
-
Randomness...14 hours ago
-
-
-
-
-
State Of The ARC #4917 hours ago
-
-
-
Monthly Round-Up: March 20251 day ago
-
Lethal Prey by John Sandford1 day ago
-
What I Wore in Australia1 day ago
-
Sunday Salon: March 30 20251 day ago
-
Nonfiction Books on BookTV3 days ago
-
-
-
-
-
I have been reading...1 week ago
-
-
February 2025 Reading Wrap Up3 weeks ago
-
-
One Big Happy Family by Susan Mallery5 weeks ago
-
-
-
-
I'm Still Reading - This Was My October4 months ago
-
Review: The Duke and I7 months ago
-
Girl Plus Books: On Hiatus8 months ago
-
-
-
What Happened to Summer?1 year ago
-
-
-
-
-
-
Are you looking for Pretty Books?2 years ago
-
-
-
-
-
-

Grab my Button!


Blog Archive
- ► 2021 (159)
- ► 2020 (205)
- ► 2019 (197)
- ► 2018 (223)
- ► 2017 (157)
- ► 2016 (157)
- ► 2015 (188)
- ► 2014 (133)
- ► 2013 (183)
- ▼ 2012 (193)
- ► 2011 (232)
- ► 2010 (257)
- ► 2009 (211)
- ► 2008 (192)


2025 Goodreads Reading Challenge
2024 - Elementary/Middle Grade Nonfiction
2023 - Middle Grade Fiction
2022 - Middle Grade Fiction
2021 - Middle Grade Fiction

2020 - Middle Grade Fiction

Just the synopsis of this one sounds like every other dystopian book out there. I think I'll pass.
ReplyDelete