Reviews

Breathe by Sarah Crossan

daphx00's review

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5.0

It's been a long time since I read Breathe, but I both feel like I only read it yesterday and that it's been ages at the same time. I absolutely loved this book, and have been eagerly anticipating book two ever since I flipped the last page. You can imagine how impatient I'm starting to get..

Breathe switches between the point of view between three teenagers: Alina, who has lived under the radar for a long time, Quinn, the son of an important man high up in the dystopian society, and Bea, who has had her eye on Quinn for a long time. The alternating POVs give us insight in how all of the major characters are experiencing the story, and I really liked to see how they worked together to pull the storylines together.

While the worldbuilding in this book was excellent, there was a lot of attention for the personal relationships in the story. Of course the story focused on the world and the dystopian society as well, but Crossan has worked a lot on how the characters feel about eachother and how they are experiencing the different events. I really liked how this worked out and am quite curious to see how the story will continue in the sequel!

Because of the attention to the feelings of the characters and the way they experience this journey, I think it will also appeal to a lot of younger readers. Having said that, I really enjoyed reading this book and I definitely recommend picking it up if you like dystopia.

Read this review and others on Loving Books.


Before:
Wow. The ending - wow. At some points a little too much focused on personal relations and less on the world, but a very good read.

goodyeargoodbooks's review against another edition

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4.0

3.5 stars, rounded up as I actually rather enjoyed this book's premise. The story is an interesting one which kept me hooked throughout. It was the characters that docked the stars here. I will say that I loved Bea, and the supporting characters such as Maude Blue and Silas were solid characters too, but my main problems lie with Quinn and especially Alina. Quinn confused me. I initially really liked him for defending Bea, but his obsession with Alina when he didn't know her at all was laughable. The spectacular section about staring at her bum was worthy of losing one star by itself. However he did redeem himself again halfway through, regarding Bea. It seemed to me that he could stand up as a character with Bea, but was rather pathetic without her. Alina proved to be less confusing. I purely despised her. From the off, she was selfish, immature and callous. Yes, she faced countless problems, but Quinn and Bea helped her when they had no obligation to, and she was absolutely awful to them. Her treatment of Maude was sickening. As with Quinn, she did show a glimmer of promise, but this happened within 20 pages of the end, and it was too-little-too-late for her character where my opinion is concerned. It is a shame as I feel that this book had a lot of potential given the premise behind it, and it just didn't reach it in all aspects.

a_strix_named_strix's review

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1.0

Death-zone oxygen concentrations cannot be survived. Full stop. Also, how do they repair those glass domes? How do they measure the oxygen intake? How do the people outside survive when their equipment failing even for a bit means rapid death? Why are things like running considered normal if only 5% of the population can pay for it?

But set this aside for a second. Even then, the characters are flat and lack depth. I legitimately hated Alina.

maximum_moxie's review

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4.0

Quite a ripping read, filled with the usual YA tropes: “not like other girls” heroines, woke bougie male protagonist, and lots of soft romance. But it also has a lot to say about corporations and complicity and trauma, as do other dystopian novels.

bookph1le's review against another edition

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2.0

This wasn't a terrible book, but I didn't think it was a very good one either. It's always hardest for me to review books that are just "meh", and this was one of those books. Some spoilers to follow.

The first problem is the characters. They say the right things, they think the right things, but not one of them had that spark that made me feel like they were living, breathing (haha, see what I did there?) beings. It's not even that they're wooden, it's that they're just there, like indifferent actors going through the motions. This is especially true of the main characters, all of whom I found flat and not the least bit compelling.

There was one character about whom I felt strongly, and that was Petra. I was incredulous at the thought of her being a leader, given how bad she seems to be at it. A good portion of the time, she seemed unhinged, and I kept wondering why anyone trusted her enough to do her bidding.

The concept was mildly interesting, but at no time did I buy it. The world-building felt shaky at best, which is never good in a dystopian. The author tells us why the despotic regime exists, but it felt like it had been plopped down. I never understood why anyone found it necessary to their survival. I mean, sure, there's the problem with a lack of oxygen, but there was no sense of people being coerced into believing in the regime. I also think the author needed to spend more time establishing what happened to all the oxygen in the first place.

The plot and pacing were often plodding. Long stretches of the book felt like serieses of events strung together for no ostensible purpose other than to advance the plot's inevitable march to the ending. I spent a lot of the book eondering what was going on, and found the episode with Quinn on the building roof so egregious. All that section did was set up Quinn's dad as a bad guy, making it lack all impact for me. It was the equivalent of the Star Trek red shirts.

In the end, this isn't a poorly written book, but one where all the pieces are there, but do poorly stitched together that you can tell that the whole is functional but not of very good quality.

picketfences's review against another edition

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

3.25

this was okay.  i won’t be seeking out other stories by this author for a long time
the ending was dismal and disheartening

adelle_bookworm's review against another edition

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4.0

3,5*
Špatné to nebylo, vlastně jsem od toho čekala podstatně míň. Ten nápad je super, bohužel to zpracování... když už konečně došlo na akci, nebylo to vypsané. Netuším, zda se jedná o prvotinu, ale dost to kazilo můj celkový dojem, a ten konec taky nic moc. Emocionálně naprosto na nule. Jinak to bylo vtipné a ano, chtěla jsem vědět, jak to skončí, takže lepší průměr.

book_leo's review against another edition

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

2.5

celjla212's review

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2.0

*Below is a review that will most probably make people mad at me...*

Quinn, Alina, and Bea are teenagers in a dystopian future where the atmosphere has been depleted of oxygen, making it impossible for anyone to breathe. As a result, The small population of survivors from The Switch now lives in a structure called The Pod, where air is pumped in and pretty much every aspect of life is controlled by an oppressive government (any of this sounding familiar yet?).

Quinn is the oldest son in a prominent family, and happens to be best friends with Bea, a brilliant but poor girl who has high aspirations. Alina is a member of a resistance group that plans to bring Breathe (the government) down. When Quinn meets Alina, he immediately becomes interested in her, and soon all three of the kids' lives are intertwined, for better or worse.

Breathe was one of the most anticipated releases of Fall 2012. I was one of those bloggers who heard about it ages ago and immediately put it on my TBR list. But unfortunately, the book description that roped me into wanting to read this book was just about the only compelling thing about it.

I was so excited to start reading this book, but once I started, the many shortcomings I found made me not want to finish it. First off, maybe it's just me having dystopian overload, but I feel like I have read this story. So. Many. Times. Pure by Julianna Baggott comes to mind, countless others. It's kinda like the author went down a dystopian novel checklist:
-Oppressive Government: CHECK
-World changing event THAT IS NEVER TRULY EXPLAINED: CHECK
-Resistance group with a crazy leader: CHECK

Then there was a YA checklist:
-Love triangle: CHECK
-Non-existent/non-caring parents: CHECK
-Whiny girl, idiot boy, kickass (but not quite) heroine: CHECK

So many things about this book didn't make sense to me. Just for example: the kids find a drifter, an older lady named Maude. She explains that before The Switch, she was training in the medical field. That would take a person with fairly high intelligence, correct? Well, in this book she talks as if she just stepped out of 1870's Appalachia. "I weren't no threat." and such. Maybe I picked things apart, but hey, I'm a reviewer so things like this catch my attention.

Characterization was severely lacking in this novel, and I'd be hard pressed to say I found redeeming qualities in any of the characters. Quinn made me want to punch him several times, Alina just wasn't the smartest, and Bea had no backbone. The sort-of-but-not-quite love triangle was very annoying.

There are several other things I had issues with, but honestly, I am tired of talking about this book and I'm ready to get it out of my mind. I only finished it because I started it...and I kind of wish I hadn't.

laurenb's review

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4.0

I enjoyed the story. It was interesting and different . No insta-love either, which I appreciated!