1.96k reviews for:

Iko

Marissa Meyer

4.06 AVERAGE


In short, I loved the story, hated the art. But, hey, everyone imagines characters to look differently. For me, this definitely wasn't it. :)
Despite that, I loved seeing all my favorite characters back again, though it was a little odd as a graphic novel. (In my opinion, some of Marissa Meyer's awesome writing was lost in the format)
Iko was as awesome as ever and I'm thrilled she gets her own story (Yay Iko!).
All in all, if you've read "The Lunar Chronicles," this book is a great way to get through that period of depression you feel right after finishing one of the greatest book series ever.

The Lunar Chronicles is one of my favorite series of recent years. They're really good! But they also leave a lot up in the air when the story ends in Winter, so this graphic novel, which follows Iko, is very welcome. I enjoyed it a lot. Iko is hilarious and awesome, and we get some glimpses of the other characters we know and love from the books. If you enjoyed the Lunar Chronicles, you'll like this, even with the different format.

New insult for lunar people: Crater brain

Iko te amo hasta más que antes.

Hubo una cosita que me molestó bastante, pero en general muy entretenido y rápido de leer
adventurous emotional funny lighthearted fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

If you've read the other Cinder books, this one won't be much of a surprise.

The main character is Iko this time, and she's as endearing as ever.

Iko's tasked herself with gathering up the wolfy men, created by Levana to be her soldiers.

The other characters are side characters as well. We get glimpses of post-Winter life for all of the main characters.

There's three main tensions in this book (and probably this series). 1, gathering up the wolfy soldiers before they kill people. 2, as a corollary to 1--getting people to trust the Lunar people again, after centuries of mindfuckery. 3, much more personally--Iko getting to be human, or at least getting respected as a human.

Just like in the Cinder books, there's politics and romance and it's set in a futuristic Silver Milennium-style world. (Well aware that's like saying it's a wet watery ocean, but not everyone is familiar with Sailor Moon's Silver Millenium.)

The author has said she's a huge fan of both Sailor Moon and Firefly, and that clearly comes through in these books.

My biggest gripes have always been these: one, it's so hetero it's unbelievable, and two, the stakes never feel believably high. Sure it's got some shock factor, but the heroes always survive and the bad guys always die or get locked up.

Bonus points for making it very clear that Kai is East Asian and giving Winter and Iko dark skin. Cinder should look more East Asian than she does, but I'll let it slide. FOR NOW.

I'll pick up the sequel when it pops up at the library, and while I enjoy these books, they're a lot like cotton candy: all fluff, no substance.

Clarifying my rating: it's not a three-star because I love Iko and because everyone wasn't white. My bar is so low. T_____T

Also is anyone else expecting the secret of Iko to be that she started life as a REAL GIRL? Because that's all the twist for stories about androids ~*~with a secret twist~*~ ever is. Someone come up with a new twist, plzkthx.

grilledcheetah's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH

dnf at 76 pages. I just don’t like the art style and the story/following iko isn’t interesting enough…
funny lighthearted fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
adventurous emotional funny inspiring fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Fantastic. I'm excited to read vol 2.