(The Selection #5)
Publication
Date: May 3, 2016
Hardcover, 279 pages, HarperTeen
Genres:
YA, Dystopian
When Eadlyn became the first
princess of Illéa to hold her own Selection, she didn’t think she would fall in
love with any of her thirty-five suitors. She spent the first few weeks of the
competition counting down the days until she could send them all home. But as
events at the palace force Eadlyn even further into the spotlight, she realizes
that she might not be content remaining alone.
Eadlyn still isn’t sure she’ll find
the fairytale ending her parents did twenty years ago. But sometimes the heart
has a way of surprising you…and soon Eadlyn must make a choice that feels more
impossible—and more important—than she ever imagined.
My Review
So once again the America Singer gang is back to do…
whatever it is the royalty in Illéa actually do. Which seems like
a whole lot of nada. And, as most people can probably relate to, The Selection series was not my favorite
and it had some major problems, but it was entertaining in its own way. The Heir and The Crown, though, have absolutely no value to the world Cass has
built. Let me tell you why I think so.
First,
let’s talk about the characters. Absolutely none of them seem real. The boys
are two-dimensional, Eadlyn is two-dimensional, and her siblings are
two-dimensional. It’s just absurd how fake they all were. While The Selection trilogy had some character
development and seemingly realistic male and female characters, it seems like
Cass put no effort whatsoever in creating characters for this duology that had
their own thoughts and feelings. All of the boys constantly kissed Eadlyn’s
butt and none of them were really that different from the next boy in line.
I feel like my character rant could go on
forever, so I’m just going to move on to the plot. My major issue with the plot
does not revolve around Eadlyn stepping up to help her father, King Maxon,
after everything that happened in The
Heir. What does bother me is the fact that her father agreed to a certain
spoilery arrangement, just because it would make his life easier. No real father would have done that to his child.
No real king would have done that to an unprepared princess.
My
second major issue plot-wise was who Eadlyn chose. This, like with the
father-daughter dilemma, does not revolve around Eadlyn’s actual choice. It
revolves around the fact that I was unemotionally invested in the boys that by
the time I got halfway through the book, I realized I didn’t care who she
chose. That should never happen in a good book. I should always care who the
main character ends up with. Always.
Now,
you might wonder why, if I claim to have this much ill-will towards this book,
that I am giving it 2.5 stars instead of 1. Well, that’s a sort-of simple
answer: the ending managed to redeem a few qualities. Eadlyn did manage to step
up, and the way her family situation worked out did kind of fix itself into a
way I was comfortable with. I still didn’t believe it could happen, but the way
it was explained later on in the book felt a little more realistic. Also, a wee
bit more character development happened towards the end, but it was nowhere
near what I really wanted.
All
in all, I’m sure, if you read and enjoyed the books in The Selection series, you’re probably going to read this one in
order to finish the entire series. However, if you want to keep things where
they left off in The One and are
unsure about continuing, just don’t bother picking this book up. It won’t add
very much to your overall experience, especially considering both books are
ridiculously short and it seems like Cass had no investment in the story. It
actually seems like the publisher pushed her to write the spin-off books more than
Cass was actually willing to write them, and that’s just sad.
*Note: I purchased
a copy of this book for myself. This in no way affected my opinion/review.
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