‘Red Rising’ Book Review

“Red Rising” by Pierce Brown is a dystopian science fiction novel set on Mars in a future society stratified by color-coded castes. The protagonist, Darrow, belongs to the lowest caste, the Reds, who work as miners to terraform the planet. After a personal tragedy, Darrow discovers the truth about the oppressive society and joins a rebel group known as the Sons of Ares. Through a transformative process, he infiltrates the Gold caste, the ruling class, to bring about change from within. The novel explores themes of rebellion, power, and social hierarchy, with intense action and political intrigue driving the narrative. “Red Rising” is the first book in a trilogy and has gained praise for its engaging plot and complex characters.

 I could not connect with Darrow as a character. His dialogue was dry, and there was little to no inner dialogue. This could have been improved by giving him character development, of which I saw small hints, and I am certain that he has to grow throughout the series as this is only the first installment. If the reader had more time with him in the mines, an emotional connection could have been easier to build. There needed to be more development and inner dialogue.

 The atmosphere was inspired by Roman history and mythology; I found this rather intriguing and think it makes the story more accessible, as there were names and myths that the average person would be familiar with. However, I did have a hard time actually picturing the world in my head. The author would have benefited from using more descriptive writing.

 The writing was accessible, easy, and readable. The story was fast-paced. As stated before, the story would have improved with inner dialogue and more descriptive writing. With that being said, it was very dry. I hated that this was in the first-person perspective rather than third. First-person does work well for some genres, but science fiction is not one of them. The writing was my biggest problem with the book.

  If I had read ‘Red Rising’ ten years ago, I would have loved it. The plot is very reminiscent of ‘The Hunger Games’: a poor person goes to the big city to take down the empire and partake in a to-the-death style game. There are more similarities, but I will not list them all. This is just a more adult style of the dystopian books that were coming out at the time it was published in 2013. As I have read many of those, this story was not unique or anything new to me.

I could not connect with Darrow as a character. There needed to be more development and inner dialogue. The atmosphere was inspired by Roman history and mythology; I found this rather intriguing and think it makes the story more accessible, as there were names and myths that the average person would be familiar with. The author would have benefited from using more descriptive writing. The writing was accessible, easy, and readable. The writing was my biggest problem with the book. If I had read ‘Red Rising’ ten years ago, I would have loved it. This story was not unique or anything new to me. This read did nothing for me, and if you are familiar with the science fiction genre, I would not recommend picking it up. However, it would be a good starting book if you are new to the genre.

2.4 out of 5 stars.

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