It's like a Civics lesson cleverly disguised as a novel for teens.
Also, Charbonneau manages to avoid the problem of first-person novels -the reader remaining ignorant- by having the character actually go out in search of answers. Malencia is rather superhuman in her memory and reasoning skills; but you forgive that in order to know what is going on.
Book 2 in "The Testing" trilogy, this book escapes the pitfalls of many trilogies. It is not book 1 again. It is not a filler book, situations progress and you can't skip it.
Malencia has now entered the University in her respective field of study. She meets her classmates, her country's leaders, and learns of a rebellion. There's another boy-interest (it is a YA novel).
Read Also:
The Hunger Games series by Suzanne Collins of course. All these "test" trilogies came out after its success.
The Legend series by Marie Lu. (Have not read but is on the "To Read" list).
Eh, any dystopian Young Adult trilogy out there.
And because I haven't said enough about this book, Thomas Paine's Common Sense.
Interesting.
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