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I received this book from Xpresso Book Tours in return for a fair and honest review.
This book is a Young Adult, sort of Science Fiction, Contemporary novel that all revolves around a nineteen-year-old girl called Sophia... doesn't it?! This story is told in the first person, present tense, which might put some people off but if you can get past that, then this is an intriguing and suspenseful tale where you learn about what is happening at the same time as the main character.
It is an intriguing tale that constantly twists and turns and is full of action. Learning about Sophia, at the same time, as Sophia makes for an amazing read as she tries to comprehend who she was and who she is. There is a hint of romance and also of a love triangle but this doesn't really detract from the story.
If I had one suggestion for this book, it would be to make Sophia's memory flashbacks easier to distinguish. Sometimes it just seemed to flip from 'here' to 'then' with just the change of a paragraph. Apart from that, this is a well-written and fast-paced story that comes to a satisfying conclusion whilst at the same time will leave you wanting more.
I'm looking forward to reading more from this Redzone series. Definitely recommended.
This book is a Young Adult, sort of Science Fiction, Contemporary novel that all revolves around a nineteen-year-old girl called Sophia... doesn't it?! This story is told in the first person, present tense, which might put some people off but if you can get past that, then this is an intriguing and suspenseful tale where you learn about what is happening at the same time as the main character.
It is an intriguing tale that constantly twists and turns and is full of action. Learning about Sophia, at the same time, as Sophia makes for an amazing read as she tries to comprehend who she was and who she is. There is a hint of romance and also of a love triangle but this doesn't really detract from the story.
If I had one suggestion for this book, it would be to make Sophia's memory flashbacks easier to distinguish. Sometimes it just seemed to flip from 'here' to 'then' with just the change of a paragraph. Apart from that, this is a well-written and fast-paced story that comes to a satisfying conclusion whilst at the same time will leave you wanting more.
I'm looking forward to reading more from this Redzone series. Definitely recommended.
Though rated new adult this first book is really more a young adult set in college.
I requested this book because I enjoyed Martin's other series, Miss Misery (and the blurb promised that Sophia wasn't human.)
Sophia's voice sounds totally different from Martin's other main character. It always impresses me when an author can do that.
The good:
This was the kind of book that kept me reading looking for answers. It was also done right too. I got enough information not to feel strung along, but I was kept curious enough to keep turning pages.
The pacing alternates between exciting thriller and everyday college life and the time line bounces around as Sophia gets her memory back. (Sounds confusing, but it really wasn't.) It's set in the near future. Mostly our world, but there were few cool new inventions.
I liked Sophia in her flashbacks, but current her seemed ordinary and overly moral. (Okay so I might have skewed priorities, but there's a time for morals and a time to kick bad guy butt without feeling bad about it!)
The best part was the friends she grew up with! Not only were they colorful characters, but they had a great relationship! Sadly, they were barely in the book. I'm hoping they become main characters in the next one!
The Bad:
There's a love triangle of course. Between the guy she met at college (who she doesn't know if she can trust) and a guy she grew up with. (Who she's forbidden to be with.) I didn't like either one. I know Martin can do banter, so where was it?
The plot kept me guessing, but only because I kept over thinking things. I was promised lots of twists and turns, so I couldn't believe it would be so predictable! It was. Guess I read/watch too much SciFi.
My expectations were just too high. I hate it when I do that, because even when the book is good, (Like this one) I wind up disappointed.
Point of View: Third (Sophia)
Predictability: 5 out of 5 (Where 1 is totally unpredictable and 5 is I knew what was going to happen way ahead of time.)
Source: Netgalley
My Summary:
Sophia wakes up in a train station with no memory. Her ID says Sophia, but she knows that's not true. A boy named Kyle seems to know her, but then people show up who she knows are bad. Her instincts scream at her to run. She might have no memory but she has spy like training.
Then we back up twelve weeks to when Sophia started at RTC college. We learn she's undercover to find a certain student. Student X as she calls them is a mutant and if Sophia doesn't identify him or her, they will. They = mysterious enemies.
I requested this book because I enjoyed Martin's other series, Miss Misery (and the blurb promised that Sophia wasn't human.)
Sophia's voice sounds totally different from Martin's other main character. It always impresses me when an author can do that.
The good:
This was the kind of book that kept me reading looking for answers. It was also done right too. I got enough information not to feel strung along, but I was kept curious enough to keep turning pages.
The pacing alternates between exciting thriller and everyday college life and the time line bounces around as Sophia gets her memory back. (Sounds confusing, but it really wasn't.) It's set in the near future. Mostly our world, but there were few cool new inventions.
I liked Sophia in her flashbacks, but current her seemed ordinary and overly moral. (Okay so I might have skewed priorities, but there's a time for morals and a time to kick bad guy butt without feeling bad about it!)
The best part was the friends she grew up with! Not only were they colorful characters, but they had a great relationship! Sadly, they were barely in the book. I'm hoping they become main characters in the next one!
The Bad:
There's a love triangle of course. Between the guy she met at college (who she doesn't know if she can trust) and a guy she grew up with. (Who she's forbidden to be with.) I didn't like either one. I know Martin can do banter, so where was it?
The plot kept me guessing, but only because I kept over thinking things. I was promised lots of twists and turns, so I couldn't believe it would be so predictable! It was. Guess I read/watch too much SciFi.
My expectations were just too high. I hate it when I do that, because even when the book is good, (Like this one) I wind up disappointed.
Point of View: Third (Sophia)
Predictability: 5 out of 5 (Where 1 is totally unpredictable and 5 is I knew what was going to happen way ahead of time.)
Source: Netgalley
My Summary:
Sophia wakes up in a train station with no memory. Her ID says Sophia, but she knows that's not true. A boy named Kyle seems to know her, but then people show up who she knows are bad. Her instincts scream at her to run. She might have no memory but she has spy like training.
Then we back up twelve weeks to when Sophia started at RTC college. We learn she's undercover to find a certain student. Student X as she calls them is a mutant and if Sophia doesn't identify him or her, they will. They = mysterious enemies.