'Red Queen' sells well 鈥 but is it different enough from other YA dystopian fare?
'Red Queen' by Victoria Aveyard centers on teenager Mare Barrow, who lives in a class-based society and discovers she has unusual powers.
'Red Queen' by Victoria Aveyard centers on teenager Mare Barrow, who lives in a class-based society and discovers she has unusual powers.
The young adult dystopian novel 鈥淩ed Queen鈥 by Victoria Aveyard is selling well. But can it separate itself enough from young adult dystopian series of the past?聽
鈥淩ed Queen,鈥 which was published on Feb. 10, centers on teenager Mare Barrow, who lives in a society where people with red blood are lower-class and those with silver are nobility and have otherworldly abilities. However, Mare, who has red blood, soon discovers she has special powers, too. She soon becomes involved in the world of those with silver blood.聽
The novel debuted at number 14 on the Children鈥檚 Interest IndieBound list the week of Feb. 15 and it reached number one on The New York Times young adult bestseller list for the week of March 1. According to Publishers Weekly, 鈥淩ed Queen鈥 is the first in a trilogy and Universal has optioned it for film.聽
Is the book a satisfying read as well? Many critics seemed to agree that the book has a lot of similar characteristics to past successful dystopian and young adult series 鈥 some felt 鈥淩ed Queen鈥 rose above the pack, while others found it too much the same.
Kirkus Reviews staff wrote that 鈥渇amiliar tropes abound. Mare is revealed as a great catalyst for change among classes and is groomed from rags to riches, and of course, seemingly kind characters turn out to be foes. However, Aveyard weaves a compelling new world, and Mare and the two men in her life evolve intriguingly as class tension rises. Revolution supersedes romance, setting the stage for action-packed surprises. An inventive, character-driven twist breathes new life into tired fantasy trends.鈥澛
School Library Journal鈥檚 Kimberly Castle-Alberts of Ohio鈥檚 Hudson Library & Historical Society also felt that 鈥淩ed Queen鈥 was refreshing, writing, 鈥淭he story has touches of the usual dystopian suspects. However, its formulaic elements are far outweighed by the breakneck pace and engaging characters. There's a bit of teen romance, but luckily the characters are self-aware enough to realize its frivolity among the story's more important plot points. A solid debut from Aveyard and a welcome addition to the plethora of speculative teen lit.鈥澛
However, Publishers Weekly didn鈥檛 think the book distinguished itself enough from past young adult successes, though the publication did have hope for future novels.聽
鈥淭here鈥檚 an unmistakable feeling of deja vu to this first installment in the Red Queen trilogy, which shares several plot points and similarities with the Hunger Games series, with more arenas for barbaric televised slaughter and honed survival skills swapped out for preternatural powers,鈥 PW wrote. 鈥淔ortunately, Aveyard鈥檚 conclusion leaves the story poised to depart from this derivative setup.鈥
But USA Today critic Brian Truitt also felt like he鈥檇 seen it all before.
鈥溾橰ed Queen鈥 plays like a game of YA bingo,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淢are has the Katniss role of unwitting revolutionary. The Red/Silver dynamic harkens to the factions of聽[Veronica Roth鈥檚] Insurgent聽or the color-coded class system of聽[Pierce Brown鈥檚] Red Rising. And naturally there is a love triangle鈥. Aveyard does add an interesting touch with aspects reminiscent of an聽X-Men聽comic 鈥 namely mutations, powers and sociological subtext鈥. Unfortunately, the opening chapter is awash in too many shades of what we've seen before in YA fare.鈥