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blackivory_10 's review for:

The Unworthy by Agustina Bazterrica
4.0
challenging dark emotional hopeful mysterious reflective sad tense medium-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

I would have definitely given this 2, maybe 3, stars while still in the first half, however, Bazterrica redeemed her unnamed narrator during the last half of The Unworthy. 
Upon finishing this novel, I needed a moment to sit and absorb what I'd just read. At its release, I did what I could to avoid spoilers or too many details regarding the plot. Going into this, my only understanding of this novel was that it'd be about a women entering a cloistered convent, and begins to question their practices. As a result, I was totally unprepared for some events revealed in the second half. To help others avoid this, I'm going to say there are two major trigger warnings:

Sexual and animal violence. 

If those are tender topics, I'd avoid this. Normally, they're not for me, but because it was wholy unexpected, it hit harder than usual. 

Spoilers ahead:



Bazterrica's The Unworthy is a dystopian novel written as a journal by an unnamed narrator. Through her entries, we gain an understanding that the world has succumbed to the effects of climate change. Rising waters swallowed whole continents, trees were cut down, humans made a last ditch effort to remediate this by installing electric metal trees, however the rise of AI forced societies to go powerless to avoid being overtaken. The world is lawless, and human survivors resort to cannibalism or foraging to survive. Our narrator has survived this post-apocalyptic world and has made her way - starving - to a cloistered convent where she's taken in, fed, clothed, and forced to submit to their new faith led by a mysterious, unseen "Him."
The sisters of this convent are overseen by an abusive, authoritative Superior Sister who demands subjugation and sacrifice at the end of her whip. She appears to derive a sexual satisfaction in the abuse and torment of her lower sisters. Meanwhile, through guilt  and cult-like programming, the sisters aim to prove themselves worthy of ascending to "enlightment." Though it's relatively unclear - until the end - what this would mean. The sisters are so dedicated to proving their worth that they subject anyone else who threatens their ascension with bullying, isolation, physical and verbal abuse. 
The arrival of LucĂ­a disrupts this, a mysterious new acolyte who secretly scaled the wall into the convent. She regularly challenges this dynamic by choosing kindness, forgiveness, and mercy to others. She befriends the narrator, but as she stands out amongst the other sisters, she casts a spotlight on herself as being eligible to ascend to "enlightenment," which risks separating her from the narrator. 
...

This convent is the ultimate "pick me" tribe, where women will resort to violence against other women in an attempt to gain the approval of "Him" to ascend. The Superior Sister is to "Him" what Ghislaine Maxwell was to Jeff Epstein and Kristina K to P. Diddy - if you catch my spoiler. She proves to be the ultimate woman who will aid a man in his sexual violence against other women, using religion and thought control to do so. 
So much more could be said of Bazterrica's symbolism throughout the The Unworthy. This proved to be a difficult read, but the narrator definitely redeems herself in the end. 



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