A review by jordannahamel
Red Rising by Pierce Brown

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

4.5

Ok so, where to begin. 

Red Rising is absolutely without a doubt not for the faint of heart both in content and commitment. If Hunger Games, Battle Royale and Game of Thrones with a dash of the Roman Empire had a fucked up baby, it would be Darrow and Red Rising. Thats not to say that I didnt enjoy it, because I absolutely did. But this was a heavy book to read for me even if it wasnt that long of a book. 

To start, I was not expecting for the story to go the way it did. I was anticipating a much more straightforward dystopian burn the system down narrative (which I still believe will be the overarching theme) but it evolved into something much more gritty and less straightforward. 

Darrow starts off as someone who sees the system only 2 inches from his face and then quite literally gets a full picture view. It changes him from being someone just trying to keep their head down and do the best they can for their family and turns him into a war lord hell bent on burning the system down from the inside out - in time. His character is overhauled inside and out to the point that throughout reading I had a hard time remembering the boy first introduced to the man that emerges through the blood, war and violence of Red Rising. Character development is in the form of "I'm not just going to be better, I'm going to be worse" and honestly, good for Darrow. Im anticipating lots of world building from the remaining books in the series, but I'm looking forward to it and how it will change Darrow's character even further. 
 
I took points off for the pacing during the "war games" portion of the book and quite frankly the writing of RR's female characters. The former: I absolutely understand the point and lesson's Darrow & Co. receive throughout this part of the book. It forces them to be calculating, cruel and learn on the fly when entering a cut throat academy. However, it was a long and slow process filled with the violence and gore that can only come from tribal war games, which was a bit exhausting at times. 

For the latter critique: I wouldn't go so far as to say the female characters were poorly written but the most prominent ones fell into the dreaded categories of "untrustworthy bitch" and "pure, Mother Mary" who only seemed to serve the purpose of pushing Darrow's character arc further at their own expense and make him the "protector" of the story. Namely Mustang, Antonia, and Eo.
Eo is literally killed off as a means to propel Darrow into action, which felt a little cheap and made her the sacrificial pure lamb of Darrow's story, when honestly the murder of his father could have been used in the exact same way. Antonia is literally introduced as the crazy sexy hot bitch who is untrustworthy if any man gets close to her. Darrow is mocked for liking Mustang and trusting her when he has no reason to doubt her (only up until the reveal of her being Lucian's twin) but it is asserted over and over she is a woman using her feminine wiles to trick him - I say this because Sevro's intentions are NEVER doubted where Mustangs continuously are. To add insult to injury, the Proctors kidnap her and of course Darrow has to save her (especially when he could not with Eo), a damsel in distress narrative she herself acknowledges! Furthermore, Mustang's entire presence is there to keep Darrow alive and drive HIS wants forward, a fact that the Apollo Proctor also directly calls out. Listen, I enjoyed the book and still enjoyed all of the characters but the pitfalls it seems every male dominated fantasy novel gives into with its female characters and female specific violence (dont even get me started on the rape in this book and Darrow's idea of "justice" whilst maintaining his power) was still extremely prevalent in Red Rising
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TLDR; Would I recommend this book? Absolutely - just not for someone under the age of 16 lol. Do I have my own critiques of it, absolutely. It is not a perfect book but after a good break and maybe a change in content, I'm excited to see where Darrow's story goes. 


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