Title: Dark Parties
Author: Sara Grant
Publication Date: December 2011 (UK)
Pages: 264
Publication Date: December 2011 (UK)
Pages: 264
Summary...
Sixteen-year-old Neva
has been trapped since birth. She was born and raised under the
Protectosphere, in an isolated nation ruled by fear, lies, and
xenophobia. A shield "protects" them from the outside world, but also
locks the citizens inside. But there's nothing left on the outside, ever
since the world collapsed from violent warfare. Or so the government
says...
Neva and her best friend Sanna believe the government is lying and stage a "dark party" to recruit members for their underground rebellion. But as Neva begins to uncover the truth, she realizes she must question everything she's ever known, including the people she loves the most.
Neva and her best friend Sanna believe the government is lying and stage a "dark party" to recruit members for their underground rebellion. But as Neva begins to uncover the truth, she realizes she must question everything she's ever known, including the people she loves the most.
My Thoughts...
It’s funny, because I’m thinking about what I have to say in
this review, and it might seem a little strange because I have two almost
opposing viewpoints about Dark Parties...
but anyway, here we go...
I have to say, it took me a long time to get into Dark Parties. For a long time, my
progress with it was pretty slow-going and it took me a relatively long time to
get through it compared to how fast I normally read a book. I just felt like
the whole story – plotline, characters, dystopian setting – was very two-dimensional.
It all felt very flat – there was no spark that caused me to really connect
with the story or become emotionally invested in the characters’ plight.
I felt like we had been thrown straight into Neva’s world,
which can be a good thing sometimes, but here it just left me feeling a little
lost. A bit like if you suddenly joined a new school, but a term after everyone
else...you’ve missed orientation and no-one’s going to explain the way things
work anymore because everyone already knows...so you’re left feeling
perpetually behind and wondering if there’s something important that you
missed. This is how I felt about inhabiting Neva’s world – the ‘Protectosphere’,
essentially a big bubble which supposedly ‘protects’ everyone from the evil world
outside – the distinct lack of world-building meant that I never really got a
proper taste for the Protectosphere and therefore never really understood the
characters’ sense of urgency for rebellion.
Neva was an okay protagonist, but there wasn’t anything
unique about her. True, she was brave, curious, determined to fight against a
corrupt government, but so is pretty much every other heroine in the YA
dystopian genre. I didn’t feel any chemistry between any of the characters –not
Neva and her best friend Sanna, not Neva and Braydon who supposedly had some
great connection since they kissed at the ‘dark party’ in the opening chapter,
and not even between Sanna and Braydon who were meant to be dating.
Nevertheless, as the story progressed and the end of the
book neared, things took a turn for the better and more exciting. I can’t go
into detail for fear of spoiling it but things did get a lot more tense and
grittier. I felt my heart beating as I imagined the dark and frightening
situations Sara Grant had placed her characters in – almost the emotional
connection with the story that I had been hoping for earlier on.
If only this turn of events had appeared earlier! It was not
quite enough to erase all the problems I had earlier on with Dark Parties but it was enough to make
me feel like I had enjoyed the book once I finished it.
All in all, although I feel that Dark Parties fell a little short of its potential – the dystopian
world of the ‘Protectosphere’ paired with the mystery of the ‘missing’ could
have been so much more exciting – the explosive ending leaves me with hope that
if there was to be a sequel , which the ending certainly invites, it could be
amazing. Indeed, Sara Grant has done very well with her debut novel and Dark Parties definitely shows her great
potential as a writer!