Reviews

The Rule of One by Leslie Saunders, Ashley Saunders

soulsbooks23's review against another edition

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3.0

La sinopsis de este libro engancha muchísimo pero a medida que la trama avanza la emoción de saber que pasar disminuye. Aun así, las protagonistas me gustaron mucho.

Ambas son hermanas gemelas que viven en un mundo donde son controlados por The rule of one (en español sería la regla de uno) y está consiste en que básicamente sólo se permite tener un solo hijo por pareja.

Pero, hubo una pareja que tuvo gemelas (nuestras protagonistas) y han vivido toda su vida guardando el secreto. Tanto así que se turnean para salir y así sucesivamente.

Hay un giro en la trama que aunque no me impresionó hizo que la historia fuese mucho más interesante. Este libro es el primero de una trilogía que continuaré leyendo.

parchementhallucinations's review against another edition

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adventurous dark hopeful tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

devonforest's review against another edition

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4.0

An easy and quick read. It was a nice change in pace compared to the other books I’ve been reading lately.

jess_mango's review against another edition

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4.0

Yes, I have a thing for dystopian fiction. Yes, this book had a very similar vibe of what I've read before. But it was still a great escape read.

In this future, climate change has caused many coastal cities to flood and a food shortage due to poor farming conditions. The government instates a rule that each family is only allowed to have 1 child. Well, the central characters in this story are identical twins "sharing" a life...only one goes out in the world at a time.

This was the first in a series and I will be adding the 2nd book to my to read list.

natalieyanka's review against another edition

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slow-paced
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No

1.75

linzthebookworm's review against another edition

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4.0

The Rule of One was a quick read and just what I needed. It's fast-paced and sucks you right in. It reminded me a lot of the Divergent series. I thought that Ava and Mira were strong characters. I like that they both have to sort of figure out who they are as individuals, and not just twins. The scene transitions were a little odd and I was desperately wishing for more background story into their everyday life. The best/worst thing about The Rule of One was the plausibility of their world. I felt the Dystopian world was incredibly realistic and well done. Some of it gave me chills. Overall I really liked it and would definitely recommend it to YA Dystopian readers.

For my full review check out https://linzthebookworm.blogspot.com/2019/09/book-review-rule-of-one-by-ashley-and-leslie-saunders.html

rellimreads's review against another edition

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DNF ~ I’m pretty sure it’s just that I’m not in the mood for YA at this moment so I’m not rating this.

It’s actually a fairly intriguing concept. I may try to pick it up again at some other point if it’s still in KU.

juniperspolyphony's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

ambeesbookishpages's review against another edition

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3.0

The full review + more can be found at The Book Bratz

Thank you NetGalley and Skycrape for the eGalley in exchange for an honest review!

I originally started The Rule of One back when I was first approved for it at the beginning of fall but I just was in a weird reading slump and I eventually gave up. From the description of The Rule of One is sounds a lot like the Netflix movie What Happened to Monday which I really enjoyed and had the same concept: the government is controlling population by limiting families to only having one child.

Ava and Mira are twins in the United States of America and because of that they illegal. "One child, one nation." The phrases that haunts them everyday. Alternating day by day the girls play the role of Ava Goodwin the eighteen year old daughter of the man in charge on the one child policy. After one fateful incident everything Ava and Mira spent eighteen years working on and hiding is unraveling and their only option is to run.

I really enjoyed the idea behind The Rule of One. With climate change at its height and the United States in an uproar the one child act seems like the perfect solution to over population, but really it is just another from of oppressing an already oppressed society. But no body plans what happens in the cases of multiples. I found the world to be interesting and I was eager to learn more. I do wish certain things were more clarified and made clearer but I am hoping that that will change in the following book.

I liked Ava and Mira's characters but I feel like there where times I couldn't decipher which POV I was reading from. It began to bleed together. I am not sure if this was purposely done because they are suppose to be exactly the same person and huge chunk of the book is them discovering what makes them unique and their own person.

I did feel bad for Mira at times because she was the "second twin" which is basically the unwanted one. If their mother was caught by the government while she was pregnant she would have been forced to keep Ava and give up Mira. Giving up Mira would have meant Mira would have lived in a labor camp and lived a short painful life. We watch as Mira's guilt eats at her through out the novel and how they guilt fuels her in different ways. Though I liked Ava there was times that I found her rather cold and not sympathetic to her sister. I found her to be self absorbed at times and not putting herself in Mira's shoes. Ava was the twin who was wanted, she had the microchip that made them Ava Goodwin. She got everything that Mira couldn't.

I did find The Rule of One interesting and I wanted to know what was going to happen next, but there was a 20% chunk of the book where I feel like nothing interesting happened. It felt more like filler then parts needed for the plot. This book was rather short too, less than 300 pages so 20% was a rather decent chunk.

Overall I did enjoy The Rule of One and am looking forward to see how the ending of this book is going to play out in the sequel that releases in May.

nicoleadrianneauthor's review against another edition

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2.0

DNF'd at 10%. I'm giving this 2 stars because the concept was good, but the execution is so poor I can't continue. The writing is juvenile, with all showing and no telling, and lacks any semblance of flow or elegance. This isn't a story but a product, and not even a good one. 3 chapters in and not a single thing has made me care about the annoying main characters and their mindless problems. I really wanted to like this, but it's a no from me.