Matched: Crossed (#2)
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(Updated: December 04, 2012)
Overall rating
3.7
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I'm not saying that I didn't enjoy Crossed in lots of places, but it's not one of those books where you scream "OH MY GOD I LOVED IT!" at the end.
I would have probably given it a 3.5 star rating for the plot, instead of 4, but I can't do that so I'll just stick with 4.
In fact, this is the second time I am trying to read it, because the first time I got so bored and out of it I just couldn't keep reading. But, I've never left a book unfinished, so I dredged up my courage and sat down to attempt it again. Maybe if it had had more action and A LOT less poetry and obsessing over Ky/Cassia (depending on whose POV it is during that chapter), I would have had enjoyed it a lot more. As I said, there were lots of things to like about Crossed, but I preferred Matched.
Ky has been sent to the Outer Provinces with other Aberrations, and Cassia has been sent to a girls' work camp. They spend a lot of their time thinking about each other and what to do when they are finally reunited. After a while, Cassia manages to sneak on board an air ship bound for the Outer Provinces, to look for Ky, and Ky escapes his work place in the Outer Provinces to go into the Society to look for Cassia. Along the way, Cassia learns more about the rebellion called the Rising, and Ky wonders how far he will go for Cassia.
I got a little annoyed at some points, because it felt like Ally Condie was dancing around the part where they could meet each other, as they kept being so close and then someone takes off and they have to keep searching. (A FEW SPOILERS AHEAD) Like Ky was at the Outer Provinces, but just before he was reunited with Cassia he took off into the Carving, a canyon. Then Cassia was sent to another work camp, where she went to the Carving, but then Ky was in a DIFFERENT canyon, so they had to get out of their canyon and go into a different one, only to go BACK into the other one and... well you get the idea. (END SPOILERS)
In Matched, I think that the poetry theme worked well with the story. I liked the "Do not go gently" kind of thing in that book and all that, but I didn't like it as much in this one.
I also liked how we got to see different POVs in this book, Ky's and Cassia's, but it didn't work too well for Ally Condie. Their voices were just way too similar, I actually had to keep flipping back to the start of the chapter because I couldn't figure out who was talking.
Most of the time, I liked the characters.
Cassia travels with a girl called Indie. I really liked Indie at first, she seemed much more out there than Cassia and not waiting for her Prince Charming to come and rescue her, and she was bold and brave and determined. So I quite liked her at the start, but then during the course of the book she just got a bit too sneaky and dishonest for me to really like her. And Cassia kept thinking of her as a friend, because Indie stuck by her, but really? I was like "Ummm... Cassia? Someone who steals and lies to you does not sound like a friend."
Ky travels with two: a young boy named Eli and Vick. I liked both of these characters. They were probably what gave the character rating a 4 and not a 3, or even a 2. They seemed to be the only two characters in this book that were realistic and not obsessing over an idea. Eli asked questions that should have been asked and Vick got angry at other people's indifference.
(SPOILER) I didn't like how Condie killed Vick (END SPOILER)
I mean, I get why she might do that, to attempt a realistic reunion for Cassia and Ky, but I didn't like it. It seemed very forced.
Cassia and Ky irritated me SO MUCH. For one thing, Ky knew about the Rising since Matched, and he knew how Cassia wanted to know about it, but he didn't tell her. I accepted this fact until he still tried to hide that fact after their reunion. He was so selfish in this book. And his explanation to why he didn't want to join the Rising just didn't ring true for me. It was a stupid explanation, and he should have gotten over it. The explanation just doesn't make sense, and it nearly breaks them up. All that time endangering their lives for each other, and they nearly just throw it away.
And Cassia is no better. One, she should KNOW not to take the damn tablet if she doesn't know exactly what it does and why people never want them. Rule number one with evil people DON'T TAKE TABLETS FROM THEM AND EAT THEM!!! And she doesn't confront Ky and Indie until the very last possible moment. Unbelievable. Another complacent heroine. Great.
Condie still manages to keep Xander in the picture, despite how little we actually see him. I like Xander. He seems honest and genuine, and really cares about what is best for Cassia, rather than for him (I'm looking at you, Ky). Cassia and Ky have
regular flash-backs of Xander. And it seems that a love-SQUARE might be in the forming. (feel free to roll your eyes here).
I think Condie can write some wonderful passages. Wonderfully beautiful passages even, once in a while. However, when these passages are in a book where every few pages a character is just sitting on a rock/staring at the stars and reciting/making up poetry,, I'm sorry, my patience flies out the window.
I'm not usually side-tracked when reading a book. I usually focus on what's happening and forget about the rest of the world. This book though, did not hold my attention very well. It probably took me three times as long to read it because I kept drifting off while still skimming the page with my eyes. You know how that happens? And then a couple of pages later, I would realise, "Right, I'm supposed to be reading," and be like "what just happened?" because I missed like three pages, and would have to re-read them.
I also would have preferred more world-building. After this book, there are still so many unanswered questions about the world, like, who runs the Society? How do the rebels get in and out so easily? Why is "the Enemy" bombing the Outer Provinces instead of the Centre? Is the Society over the entire world, or just America? What is the Warming, and how does it connect to the Society taking over?
I recommend this book to those who felt that Matched was an absolutely, totally amazing book (I'm sorry, but I did not.) If you thought that Matched was just "okay", then chances are you will be disappointed with Crossed. I hope Reached is better.
I would have probably given it a 3.5 star rating for the plot, instead of 4, but I can't do that so I'll just stick with 4.
In fact, this is the second time I am trying to read it, because the first time I got so bored and out of it I just couldn't keep reading. But, I've never left a book unfinished, so I dredged up my courage and sat down to attempt it again. Maybe if it had had more action and A LOT less poetry and obsessing over Ky/Cassia (depending on whose POV it is during that chapter), I would have had enjoyed it a lot more. As I said, there were lots of things to like about Crossed, but I preferred Matched.
Ky has been sent to the Outer Provinces with other Aberrations, and Cassia has been sent to a girls' work camp. They spend a lot of their time thinking about each other and what to do when they are finally reunited. After a while, Cassia manages to sneak on board an air ship bound for the Outer Provinces, to look for Ky, and Ky escapes his work place in the Outer Provinces to go into the Society to look for Cassia. Along the way, Cassia learns more about the rebellion called the Rising, and Ky wonders how far he will go for Cassia.
I got a little annoyed at some points, because it felt like Ally Condie was dancing around the part where they could meet each other, as they kept being so close and then someone takes off and they have to keep searching. (A FEW SPOILERS AHEAD) Like Ky was at the Outer Provinces, but just before he was reunited with Cassia he took off into the Carving, a canyon. Then Cassia was sent to another work camp, where she went to the Carving, but then Ky was in a DIFFERENT canyon, so they had to get out of their canyon and go into a different one, only to go BACK into the other one and... well you get the idea. (END SPOILERS)
In Matched, I think that the poetry theme worked well with the story. I liked the "Do not go gently" kind of thing in that book and all that, but I didn't like it as much in this one.
I also liked how we got to see different POVs in this book, Ky's and Cassia's, but it didn't work too well for Ally Condie. Their voices were just way too similar, I actually had to keep flipping back to the start of the chapter because I couldn't figure out who was talking.
Most of the time, I liked the characters.
Cassia travels with a girl called Indie. I really liked Indie at first, she seemed much more out there than Cassia and not waiting for her Prince Charming to come and rescue her, and she was bold and brave and determined. So I quite liked her at the start, but then during the course of the book she just got a bit too sneaky and dishonest for me to really like her. And Cassia kept thinking of her as a friend, because Indie stuck by her, but really? I was like "Ummm... Cassia? Someone who steals and lies to you does not sound like a friend."
Ky travels with two: a young boy named Eli and Vick. I liked both of these characters. They were probably what gave the character rating a 4 and not a 3, or even a 2. They seemed to be the only two characters in this book that were realistic and not obsessing over an idea. Eli asked questions that should have been asked and Vick got angry at other people's indifference.
(SPOILER) I didn't like how Condie killed Vick (END SPOILER)
I mean, I get why she might do that, to attempt a realistic reunion for Cassia and Ky, but I didn't like it. It seemed very forced.
Cassia and Ky irritated me SO MUCH. For one thing, Ky knew about the Rising since Matched, and he knew how Cassia wanted to know about it, but he didn't tell her. I accepted this fact until he still tried to hide that fact after their reunion. He was so selfish in this book. And his explanation to why he didn't want to join the Rising just didn't ring true for me. It was a stupid explanation, and he should have gotten over it. The explanation just doesn't make sense, and it nearly breaks them up. All that time endangering their lives for each other, and they nearly just throw it away.
And Cassia is no better. One, she should KNOW not to take the damn tablet if she doesn't know exactly what it does and why people never want them. Rule number one with evil people DON'T TAKE TABLETS FROM THEM AND EAT THEM!!! And she doesn't confront Ky and Indie until the very last possible moment. Unbelievable. Another complacent heroine. Great.
Condie still manages to keep Xander in the picture, despite how little we actually see him. I like Xander. He seems honest and genuine, and really cares about what is best for Cassia, rather than for him (I'm looking at you, Ky). Cassia and Ky have
regular flash-backs of Xander. And it seems that a love-SQUARE might be in the forming. (feel free to roll your eyes here).
I think Condie can write some wonderful passages. Wonderfully beautiful passages even, once in a while. However, when these passages are in a book where every few pages a character is just sitting on a rock/staring at the stars and reciting/making up poetry,, I'm sorry, my patience flies out the window.
I'm not usually side-tracked when reading a book. I usually focus on what's happening and forget about the rest of the world. This book though, did not hold my attention very well. It probably took me three times as long to read it because I kept drifting off while still skimming the page with my eyes. You know how that happens? And then a couple of pages later, I would realise, "Right, I'm supposed to be reading," and be like "what just happened?" because I missed like three pages, and would have to re-read them.
I also would have preferred more world-building. After this book, there are still so many unanswered questions about the world, like, who runs the Society? How do the rebels get in and out so easily? Why is "the Enemy" bombing the Outer Provinces instead of the Centre? Is the Society over the entire world, or just America? What is the Warming, and how does it connect to the Society taking over?
I recommend this book to those who felt that Matched was an absolutely, totally amazing book (I'm sorry, but I did not.) If you thought that Matched was just "okay", then chances are you will be disappointed with Crossed. I hope Reached is better.
Watch Out for them Blue Pills
(Updated: December 04, 2013)
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
I think we should all agree that we will never take pills that we have no idea what they do. That’s a key lesson Cassia should have learned heading into “Crossed,” the second book in Ally Condie’s Matched trilogy.
In the second book, Cassia is out traveling through the wilderness to find Ky, her long-lost lover who’s been forced into the Outer Provinces to fight for his life. Cassia takes with her a cache of blue pills given to her by Xander, the boy she left to follow Ky. The Society has told citizens all along that the blue pills equal survival. Just take a couple if you find yourself without food and they will keep you sustained until you reach a meal.
But can the Society be trusted? They’re known to spread lies to keep the population in a constant lemming status, but this lie may be deadly. I have a hard enough time already taking aspirin from someone else, and now who knows how long it’ll be until I ever take any medication ever again. How do we know those pharmacists can be trusted?!
In all seriousness, this is a good book. It has less sci-fi development in Condie’s world as opposed to the first book, but it has Ky and Cassia’s inner monologues on how much they love each other, and I love me a good star-crossed lovers story. This left me really anticipating what will happen in the third book, as it looks like there’s going to be a lot of development on how the Society and the Rising will act in a final showdown.
In the second book, Cassia is out traveling through the wilderness to find Ky, her long-lost lover who’s been forced into the Outer Provinces to fight for his life. Cassia takes with her a cache of blue pills given to her by Xander, the boy she left to follow Ky. The Society has told citizens all along that the blue pills equal survival. Just take a couple if you find yourself without food and they will keep you sustained until you reach a meal.
But can the Society be trusted? They’re known to spread lies to keep the population in a constant lemming status, but this lie may be deadly. I have a hard enough time already taking aspirin from someone else, and now who knows how long it’ll be until I ever take any medication ever again. How do we know those pharmacists can be trusted?!
In all seriousness, this is a good book. It has less sci-fi development in Condie’s world as opposed to the first book, but it has Ky and Cassia’s inner monologues on how much they love each other, and I love me a good star-crossed lovers story. This left me really anticipating what will happen in the third book, as it looks like there’s going to be a lot of development on how the Society and the Rising will act in a final showdown.
Good Points
Good lead into the third and final book.
Crossed by Ally Condie
Overall rating
3.7
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
ISBN: 9780525423652
Publisher: Dutton
Pages: 367
Fighting for truth
Escaping for freedom
Rebelling for love?
In search of a future that may not exist and faced with the decision of who to share it with, Cassia journeys to the Outer Provinces in pursuit of Ky - taken by the Society to his certain death - only to find that he has escaped, leaving a series of clues in his wake.
Cassia's quest leads her to question much of what she holds dear, even as she finds glimmers of a different life across the border. But as Cassia nears resolve and certainty about her future with Ky, an invitation for rebellion, an unexpected betrayal, and a surprise visit from Xander - who may hold the key to the uprising and, still, to Cassia's heart - change the game once again. Nothing is as expected on the edge of Society, where crosses and double crosses make the path more twisted than ever.
I didn't enjoy Crossed as much as I thought I would. I missed reading from the perspective of someone within the Society, and I missed reading about some of the characters that were in Matched, such as Bram and Xander. My favourite character in Crossed was Eli, because of his innocence and naivety. Cassia wasn't one of my favourite characters because of her reliance and faith in the Society, despite the harm that the Society inflicted upon her and her family. I love the cover of Crossed, I really like the colours that have been used and how the image of the girl escaping from the glass sphere, represents Cassia's escape from the Society.
Available at Amazon.co.uk.
Publisher: Dutton
Pages: 367
Fighting for truth
Escaping for freedom
Rebelling for love?
In search of a future that may not exist and faced with the decision of who to share it with, Cassia journeys to the Outer Provinces in pursuit of Ky - taken by the Society to his certain death - only to find that he has escaped, leaving a series of clues in his wake.
Cassia's quest leads her to question much of what she holds dear, even as she finds glimmers of a different life across the border. But as Cassia nears resolve and certainty about her future with Ky, an invitation for rebellion, an unexpected betrayal, and a surprise visit from Xander - who may hold the key to the uprising and, still, to Cassia's heart - change the game once again. Nothing is as expected on the edge of Society, where crosses and double crosses make the path more twisted than ever.
I didn't enjoy Crossed as much as I thought I would. I missed reading from the perspective of someone within the Society, and I missed reading about some of the characters that were in Matched, such as Bram and Xander. My favourite character in Crossed was Eli, because of his innocence and naivety. Cassia wasn't one of my favourite characters because of her reliance and faith in the Society, despite the harm that the Society inflicted upon her and her family. I love the cover of Crossed, I really like the colours that have been used and how the image of the girl escaping from the glass sphere, represents Cassia's escape from the Society.
Available at Amazon.co.uk.
Crossed by Ally Condie
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
Crossed is the sequel to the amazing book Matched by Ally Condie. It is the second book in the trilogy. Crossed continues to follow the life of Cassia Reyes and her quest to find the boy she loves and the redemption from her Society life, The Rising.
At the end of Matched, the reader is left wondering what Cassia will do - how will she solve her love choice between Xander and Ky? We know Ky is the man of the hour, but her childhood love for Xander is never far from her thoughts. Crossed answers that question for us and much more. And within this simple decision of love, Cassia is also to answer questions that are bigger than she is...what is the journey of life all about? Is their ever true freedom - freedom from The Society, or freedom in The Rising? Cassia believes with all her heart that The Rising is the answer she needs. The answer to her love for Ky or Xander, the answer to who she can trust, the answer to save her soul. It's the quest of a lifetime.
Her journey is long and hard. She meets some she can trust and finds that others she thought she knew were keeping secrets from her, secrets that change almost everything. She is challenged. Ky is challenged. And the true conflict of the story is how they meet, and sometimes fail to meet, the test in front of them. They are both seeing the world as a different place, but for Cassia it is all new. Ky brings his family demons with him and his status as an aberration, but Cassia has never known anything outside the comfort of The Society, until now.
She proves to be a strong heroine, not afraid to take chances. She endures, as well as anyone else, scourging across unknown territory. She will let nothing stand in her way of getting to Ky, The Rising, or back to her family; even back to Xander.
Crossed as a sequel does not disappoint. It hints enough at Matched to keep the reader engaged and wondering about the characters met before now, but moves forward in a way that introduces new characters, settings, and plot lines to the reader in an unobtrusive way.
This book is written from both Ky and Cassia's viewpoint, it shifts every chapter. I must admit, I found myself enjoying the chapters from Ky's viewpoint more than Cassia's. I'm not sure why, I can't quite put my finger on it. Possibly because I believed so much in the suffering of Ky's character and knew the true heartbreak that would ensue for him if he was to lose Cassia in this book. I kept reading to make sure Ky was safe and loved. My heart bleeds for him. I'm not sure how I feel about Xander, and sometimes how I feel about Cassia.
I can't wait for the final book to hit the shelves so I can devour it as quickly as I've devoured the first two. Ally Condie - you certainly have my attention!
I can't find a date for when this will be released, but when I do - I'll post it! :-)
At the end of Matched, the reader is left wondering what Cassia will do - how will she solve her love choice between Xander and Ky? We know Ky is the man of the hour, but her childhood love for Xander is never far from her thoughts. Crossed answers that question for us and much more. And within this simple decision of love, Cassia is also to answer questions that are bigger than she is...what is the journey of life all about? Is their ever true freedom - freedom from The Society, or freedom in The Rising? Cassia believes with all her heart that The Rising is the answer she needs. The answer to her love for Ky or Xander, the answer to who she can trust, the answer to save her soul. It's the quest of a lifetime.
Her journey is long and hard. She meets some she can trust and finds that others she thought she knew were keeping secrets from her, secrets that change almost everything. She is challenged. Ky is challenged. And the true conflict of the story is how they meet, and sometimes fail to meet, the test in front of them. They are both seeing the world as a different place, but for Cassia it is all new. Ky brings his family demons with him and his status as an aberration, but Cassia has never known anything outside the comfort of The Society, until now.
She proves to be a strong heroine, not afraid to take chances. She endures, as well as anyone else, scourging across unknown territory. She will let nothing stand in her way of getting to Ky, The Rising, or back to her family; even back to Xander.
Crossed as a sequel does not disappoint. It hints enough at Matched to keep the reader engaged and wondering about the characters met before now, but moves forward in a way that introduces new characters, settings, and plot lines to the reader in an unobtrusive way.
This book is written from both Ky and Cassia's viewpoint, it shifts every chapter. I must admit, I found myself enjoying the chapters from Ky's viewpoint more than Cassia's. I'm not sure why, I can't quite put my finger on it. Possibly because I believed so much in the suffering of Ky's character and knew the true heartbreak that would ensue for him if he was to lose Cassia in this book. I kept reading to make sure Ky was safe and loved. My heart bleeds for him. I'm not sure how I feel about Xander, and sometimes how I feel about Cassia.
I can't wait for the final book to hit the shelves so I can devour it as quickly as I've devoured the first two. Ally Condie - you certainly have my attention!
I can't find a date for when this will be released, but when I do - I'll post it! :-)
CM
Cresta McGowan
Top 500 Reviewer
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