For thirty-five girls,
the Selection is the chance of a lifetime. The opportunity to escape the
life laid out for them since birth. To be swept up in a world of
glittering gowns and priceless jewels. To live in the palace and compete
for the heart of the gorgeous Prince Maxon.
But for America
Singer, being Selected is a nightmare. It means turning her back on her
secret love with Aspen, who is a caste below her. Leaving her home to
enter a fierce competition for a crown she doesn't want. Living in a
palace that is constantly threatened by violent rebel attacks.
Then
America meets Prince Maxon. Gradually, she starts to question all the
plans she's made for herself- and realizes that the life she's always
dreamed of may not compare to a future she never imagined.
In a dystopian future (yes,
another one of these novels) the prince of the country that is today
parts of both American continents chooses his bride from a group of
specially selected women who are sequestered in his palace while he
dates them. At the beginning there are 36 girls, one from each province,
but slowly the prince will narrow down that number to one, and she will
become his wife and queen. America (the main character, not the country
no longer in existence) puts her name into the lottery to compete for
the prince's heart and crown under pressure from her family and the last
thing she expects is to actually be selected. The only thing holding
her back is her love for her secret boyfriend, Aspen. No one knows about
their relationship because Aspen is a caste below her, and she knows
that her best hope for the future is to marry up, not down. Her life
gets even more complicated when she realizes that Prince Maxon is not
the stiff prince she always thought he was but a really great guy.
However, this book is not only about the silly romance stuff-the palace
is constantly attacked by rebels and the girls are risking their lives
by staying.
In case you haven't been able to tell from the
synopsis, The Selection is The Hunger Games meets The Bachelor. You've
got representatives from the districts of the US in a horrible future
competing for fame, glory, and the heart of the prince. The characters
were basically replicas of the characters in the Hunger Games, just with
dresses instead of weapons. America's personality is like a more
immature version of Katniss'. Both girls are extremely low in society,
love their little sisters to death, break the super-controlling laws of
the country for love (though Katniss is a little less selfish in this
case). Both girls are a lot better at the competition than they thought
they would be, starting out as the underdog and eventually becoming the
one to beat. They both take risks and find themselves possibly falling
for the sweet sensitive guy they are supposed to be falling for while
feeling guilty about the guy they left at home. In case you couldn't
connect the dots, Aspen is Gale, Maxon is Peeta, May is Prim. The other
girls in the competition also have counterparts but since I can't
remember all their names, I'll let you figure that part out.
Throughout
all the pretty dresses and princessing, America is trying to get over
her hypocritical ex, Aspen. I am calling him a hypocrite because he was
the one who got her to put her name in in the first place, and then
tried to get her to not go. If he really loved her that much he would
have either let her go and cheered for her so she and her family would
be well-off, or he would tell her not to even put her name in because he
was terrified of the one in a million chance she would be selected.
Instead he went for option number 3-be a selfish jerk who tells his
girlfriend to try to achieve more in life then tries to hold her back.
In
most books portraying a future that I am desperately hoping our country
never comes close to, the system in place is one that is seemingly
perfect with a few extremely large gaps which are cause for rebellion.
Instead, the world in The Selection went back in social and governmental
developments. Everyone is in a caste and is stuck unless they marry up.
Marrying up, however, only applies to women because she automatically
joins her husband's caste. There's also, need I remind you, a monarchy.
An actual monarchy. Most of these types of books have omniscient
oligarchies not monarchies with a kind king and queen. Instead of going
into the space age, the Selection takes you back to the Middle Ages.
Now
comes an extremely petty request. Can everyone please bring your
attention to the cover, specifically that blue dress in the center? I
spent about 5 minutes just staring at it before every time I opened the
book.
5 stars.