[PDF] Prenota pieno Ebook gratis [PDF] -Allegiant (Divergent Series) by Roth, Veronica (2013) Hardcover- online pdf
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- Published on: 1900
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
Customer Reviews
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.There are shades of Huxley’s Island in this book with the factions as some kind of experiment in a better way of living
By Tracey Madeley
This book is different to the other two, although it keeps the traditional first person narrative of a YA novel. We have both Tris and Tobias’s point of view, alternating between the chapters. It can be a little disorientating if you put the book down between chapters, but the ending confirms the reason for the change in format. It is also interesting to see things from Tobias’s point of view and not have his emotions filtered through Tris. I also feel we get a more rounded view of Tris and her more reckless, Dauntless side.There are shades of Huxley’s Island in this book with the factions as some kind of experiment in a better way of living, as well as Big Brother and 1984. We also learn more about why the faction system was established and there is an even greater sense of manipulation and control. For Tobias the polarisation is taken even further with both parents being on opposite sides with Tris following Marcus at one point.The concept of a memory serum is fascinating and a more subtle form of control than the simulation in the previous books. Here memory can be wiped and a new version of history taught. Peter tries to take this a step further and banish his more aggressive and negative traits, but the suggestion is that they begin to creep back. This is the basis for the old argument of nature verses nurture in relation o the formation of personality.Having both Tris and Tobias’s perspectives enables a deeper understanding of their relationship. It also highlights the difficulties and sources of conflict in most relationships – friends, family, forgiveness, jealousy and makes some very profound comments about the nature of forgiveness. “If we stay together, I’ll have to forgive you over and over again, and if you’re still in this, you’ll have to forgive me over and over again too,’ I say. ‘So forgiveness isn’t the point. What I really should have been tryi9ng to figure out is whether we were still good for each other.”I thoroughly enjoyed the Divergence series and felt the ending was more satisfying and credible than the Hunger Games. I found the series more complex and relevant to modern day issues of relationship, personality, control and the role of the State. For this reason I would rate it above the Hunger Games and now look forward to seeing the film and reading Four!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.Why the switches in the 1st person's viewpoint?
By M. D. Saunderson
I found the constant shifting of the first-person narrative from Tris to Tobias (Four,) and back, chapter by chapter hard to keep up with.I would get half way through paragraphs, only so realise that it was now Four, not Tris who was the narrator, or the other way round. They both sound/read the same. Other authors have done it, and pulled it off, but they made the narrative style of the two protagonists so different that it was easy to tell who's view point we were seeing the action from.Tolkien managed multiple plot lines in the Lord of the Rings with little or no confusion.Ian M Banks did it brilliantly in "Feersum Endginn" (Fearsome Engine) by using conventional spelling for one charaters narrative, and the other haf ov it foneticaly speld. U noo hoo waz torking, it was obviuz.Some of my expectations were met - I had already realised that the city (Chicago) was some form of experiment part way through book 1 - the gates were locked to keep people in, not out. A bit of a let down.TO be fair, Stephen King can not write the last few pages of most of his multi-million selling books either. 600 pages of excellence, followed by the ending "So I hit it on the head with a rock & killed IT."
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.Quite disappointing
By flo
It's pretty slow compared to the 2 first one, even slightly boring; I am not convinced by the 2 persons narration since for a start they're both too similar and I didn't feel I could even distinguished them one for the other sometimes, I had to go back to the beginning of the chapter to remind myself of whose head I was supposed to be in. Tris' thoughts and conclusions are often way above what a 16 years old would think/conclude, the maturity level doesn't stack, and isn't really believable. Quite large plot holes in the story line, and timeline. Disappointing.
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