Memento Nora by Angie Smibert

In the future, it doesn't pay to remember.

I
n Nora's world you don't have to put up with nightmares. Nora goes with her mother to TFC--a Therapeutic Forgetting Clinic. There, she can describe her horrible memory and take the pill that will erase it. But at TFC, a chance encounter with a mysterious guy changes Nora's life. She doesn't take the pill. And when Nora learns the memory her mother has chosen to forget, she realizes that someone needs to remember.

With newfound friends Micah and Winter, Nora makes a comic book of their memories called Memento. It's an instant hit, but it sets off a dangerous chain of events. Will Nora, Micah, and Winter be forced to take the Big Pill that will erase their memories forever?

-Amazon product description.

Yet another great book in the dystopia craze, Memento Nora sucked me in instantly. Though it is only around 180 pages long, it is a fully realized world full of terrorist attacks, paranoia, and government control. At the center of it all is young Nora who, after one traumatic experience, has her whole world turned upside down. Smibert is currently working on the sequel.

-Sam.
The Gathering (Darkness Rising #1) by Kelley Armstrong

Strange things are happening in Maya's tiny Vancouver Island town. First, her friend Serena, the captain of the swim team, drowns mysteriously in the middle of a calm lake. Then, one year later, mountain lions are spotted rather frequently around Maya's home—and her reactions to them are somewhat . . . unexpected. Her best friend, Daniel, has also been experiencing unexplainable premonitions about certain people and situations.

It doesn't help that the new bad boy in town, Rafe, has a dangerous secret, and he's interested in one special part of Maya's anatomy—her paw-print birthmark.

-Amazon product description.

This latest YA book from author Kelley Armstrong is the start of a new trilogy, while at the same time being a continuation of her Darkest Powers trilogy (The Summoning, The Awakening, and The Reckoning). You do not have to have read the first trilogy to understand The Gathering but it is fun to have knowledge of things that Maya and her friends can only guess at. Eventually, Armstrong plans to merge the two trilogies, but as of now they're separate stories.

I read this book at a very fast pace. It's around 360 pages long, but the chapters are broken up so that it flies by rather quickly. The story is engrossing from page one, and I'm so eager to read the second installment! The second book is called The Calling and it will be out April 2012.

-Sam.

Lately, I have become a big fan of YA dystopian literature. Series such as The Hunger Games, The Mortal Instruments, and The Forest of Hands and Teeth are just a few in this ever growing phenomena (much like the vampire craze that has been sweeping the YA world the past few years). Instead of making separate posts, I've decided to list my top 3 new dystopian books I've read most recently. All 3 of these books are the first in new trilogies.



1. Across the Universe by Beth Revis

Imagine leaving everything behind in order to be with the people you love, only to be left with nothing. Amy and her parents have been cryogenically frozen to be awakened in 300 years when their spaceship reaches the planet they will colonize. Unfortunately, Amy is unfrozen 50 years too soon. Her parents are too critical to the colony to awaken early, so by the time she sees them again, she will be older than they are. The culture on the spaceship is unfamiliar and everyone Amy meets is either an emotionless drone or lives in the mental ward. But there is little time for her to grieve the loss of her former life, because someone is thawing other colonists and leaving them to die.

In order to find the murderer, Amy must join forces with Elder, the teenage future leader of the ship. But all of the inhabitants onboard have been told lies, and there are secrets that even Elder doesn't know. This compelling novel is told in alternating chapters from Amy's and Elder's points of view. Amy is a contemporary character in a fish-out-of-water situation, and her grief and fear are realistically depicted. And as Elder learns the truth behind the ship, he begins to experience a coming-of-age that is convincingly written.

The mystery will propel readers along, and the budding romance between Amy and Elder set against the backdrop of a dystopian society will appeal even to readers who don't enjoy science fiction.

-School Library Journal

2. Delirium by Lauren Oliver

Lena Haloway is content in her safe, government-managed society. She feels (mostly) relaxed about the future in which her husband and career will be decided, and looks forward to turning 18, when she’ll be cured of deliria, a.k.a. love. She tries not to think about her mother’s suicide (her last words to Lena were a forbidden “I love you”) or the supposed “Invalid” community made up of the uncured just beyond her Portland, Maine, border. There’s no real point—she believes her government knows how to best protect its people, and should do so at any cost.

But 95 days before her cure, Lena meets Alex, a confident and mysterious young man who makes her heart flutter and her skin turn red-hot. As their romance blossoms, Lena begins to doubt the intentions of those in power, and fears that her world will turn gray should she submit to the procedure. In this powerful and beautifully written novel, Lauren Oliver, the bestselling author of Before I Fall, throws readers into a tightly controlled society where options don’t exist, and shows not only the lengths one will go for a chance at freedom, but also the true meaning of sacrifice.

-Amazon.com review

3. XVI by Julia Karr

In 2150 Chicago, girls are walking billboards. Upon turning 16, they receive government-issued tattoos on their wrists that read “XVI.” They’re supposed to keep the girls safe, but in reality, the tattoos broadcast their brand-new sexual availability. As their sixteenth birthdays approach, Nina is increasingly disturbed by her best friend’s obsession with becoming the ideal “sex-teen” and entering the Female Liaison Specialist (FeLs) service, the only option for women from the lower tiers to move up the social ladder. Meanwhile, Nina works hard to uncover the mystery her dead mother left behind, a secret that could end the entire FeLs program.

In her unsettling debut, Karr depicts a sex-obsessed future where women are the perpetual victims of predatory marketing, and other societal ills seen in our present—families trapped in the welfare system, pharmaceutical companies in bed with health-care providers and the media—have been taken to terrifying ends.

-Booklist review.
The Dark and Hollow Places (Forest of Hands and Teeth Book #3) by Carrie Ryan

There are many things that Annah would like to forget: the look on her sister's face when she and Elias left her behind in the Forest of Hands and Teeth, her first glimpse of the horde as they found their way to the Dark City, the sear of the barbed wire that would scar her for life. But most of all, Annah would like to forget the morning Elias left her for the Recruiters.

Annah's world stopped that day and she's been waiting for him to come home ever since. Without him, her life doesn't feel much different from that of the dead that roam the wasted city around her. Then she meets Catcher and everything feels alive again.

Except, Catcher has his own secrets -- dark, terrifying truths that link him to a past Annah's longed to forget, and to a future too deadly to consider. And now it's up to Annah -- can she continue to live in a world drenched in the blood of the living? Or is death the only escape from the Return's destruction?

-Amazon product description.

While amazing conclusion to this great zombie dystopian trilogy, The Dark and Hollow Places still left me wanting more. I can't get enough of this vast world Ryan has created. Though the stories of these characters have come to a close, I really hope she continues to write in the same world of The Forest of Hands and Teeth.

-Sam.
Night School (Blood Coven #5) by Mari Mancusi

After their parents' shocking revelation about their fae heritage and an attack on their lives, the McDonald twins are forced to hide out deep in the Swiss Alps at Riverdale Academy, a secret vampire slayer training facility. And with no way to contact their vampire boyfriends for rescue, they're going to have to play nice with the locals.

But when Sunny starts acting strange, Rayne realizes that there's more to fear at Riverdale than getting staked by the student body-leading to a showdown in Fairyland that may cost the twins their lives.

-Amazon product description.

This series just keeps getting better and better! While the premise of Sunny and Rayne's parents being faeries seemed a bit too cheesy for me when it was introduced at the conclusion of Bad Blood, Mancusi managed to make it work. I have so much fun reading these books! They're extremely witty and self-aware. To anyone looking for a vampire series with a tad bit more bite than Twilight, I encourage everyone to check out the Blood Coven.

-Sam.