Review Detail

3.7 6
Young Adult Fiction 622
Did Not Live Up to my Expectations.
Overall rating
 
2.3
Plot
 
N/A
Characters
 
N/A
Writing Style
 
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
Originally Posted on Confessions of an Opinionated Book Geek
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Good Points

West is literally running for her life for most of this book. She has gone active and has the constant knowledge that her ALT is after her. With all of this, “Dualed” lacks tension. It’s annoyingly repetitive and West is just too stoic a narrator. The story starts off strong; West has just buried another sibling who was killed by their alternate. She is still in her funeral blacks when Cord, a boy she has known all of her life, goes active. (Going “Active” means that you have a month to hunt down and kill your alternate) West refuses to lose another person and pushes Cord to go after his alt immediately. This sets off a chain of action packed and heartbreaking events.

At this point, I am hungrily flipping through the pages (well, sliding across the screen of my nook). I’m thinking that this book is going to be great, but it isn’t. The issue is that the book doesn’t so much decline as it goes static. West runs around Kersh, trying to avoid her Alt and Cord, while killing strangers and innocents. In the first 10% of this book West becomes a Striker. A striker is an assassin who kills alts for those who can afford to pay. This ruined the book for me. One, because “Dualed” isn’t being advertised as a book about an assassin and I felt completely blindsided. It happens so early in the book, that it blows my mind that it is not mentioned in the synopsis, the trailer or any other promotional media I have seen. Second, in a world filled with Katniss Everdeens and Rose Hathaways it is very difficult to like a heroine who kills for no reason.

The author tries to give us this spiel about how Striker’s fight against the system. No. Robin Hood fights against the system. Bruce Wayne fights against the system, Striker’s kill for the highest bidder. Sure, this is not what the Kersh government wants and I guess it is a form of rebellion, but that is not a good enough excuse. West does not sign up to help the little man or to smuggle people out of the city limits. No, she signs up to kill innocent people. At least the government gives them a 50% chance of survival. West and her people take that away. Since the government is so corrupt and rules absolutely, it’s not like the people who can pay to eliminate their alternates have worked hard for their money or anything. These are people who have the option of not getting their hands dirty. It is cheating. There is a way of life in Kersh and instead of trying to improve that life, West is just helping cowards beat the system.

There is all this talk about how West should become a Striker as a mode of training. I expected to read awesome training sequences, where West learns to become a warrior. There is none. So, we just follow along as West bungles through the murders of innocent people. This storyline was just no good for me. Seeing as there is no real training, besides West getting the feel for killing another person, it just seemed villainous. A fifteen-year-old girl killing people does not entertain me. Especially, when she is killing for reasons other then survival. Scenes where she just walks up to an unsuspecting person and offs them really made me cringe inside. Why are we rooting for this cold-blooded killer?

The one good thing about this book is Cord. Cord is loyal, trustworthy and steadfast. He comes through for West even when she turns her back on him, demands he leave her alone and abandons him. He protects her despite herself and is always there to lend a hand. He is a strong young man who understands why she is pushing him away. Instead of getting pissy, Cord becomes even more determined. He is not going to leave her to face death alone. I loved that about him. It got to the point where I wanted Cord to just forget about West and find a girl who respected his strength. West becomes obsessed with protecting Cord, with good reason, but after awhile it just seemed shallow. The person she is really protecting is herself.

My last thought is about the government of Kersh itself. Their governing style makes absolutely no sense to me. Kersh is afraid of an attack from the outside world. This fear pushes them to create a warrior society. If you are not the strongest ALT, you do not deserve to live. I’ll ignore the lack of common sense in this idea…just because you can kill someone first doesn’t make you a better warrior, but I wont start a philosophical discussion about that. My issue is what happens after you complete. You have won, you are worthy and you can now go off and live a normal life! Except, you could be walking down the street and get shot by an eleven year old trying to get to their Alt. Literally. So, the government spends all this time and money getting young people prepared to fight for their life, these young people kill someone with their face (which must be traumatizing) and now they have to worry about being collateral damage?! Why is there not a warzone or battlefield specifically for alts? We’re talking about people from the age of 10 to 20. Even with all their training, they are children! Of course there will be causalities. They are frightened and too immature to deal with the stress of it all. Why are they allowed to kill each other in the middle of the street? It just makes absolutely no sense to me.

Recommended for fans of Dystopian stories. If you like dystopian worlds, where people have to kill to survive, cool technologies and alternate universes you should check out this book.
ND
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March 15, 2013
I'm so torn about Dualed. I'd really been looking forward to it, but I haven't read any good reviews thus far. I like dystopians with cool technology, but I don't particularly want to read about a whole bunch of unnecessary killing.
I may check it out someday, but it's pretty low on my priority list at the moment.
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