No uprisings here, and that was something really refreshing to read about. Tarrin's just a boy trying to figure out who he is and what he wants to do with his life, instead of having Deet, his guardian using him like a money making machine. Now, unlike a lot of dystopians I read nowadays, it's not about some huge hero who goes and saves the world from this terrible, terrible injustice that is society. This is a book that actually had me shuddering at the idea of the 'Peter Pan' project- in the middle of the day. The Hunted was something I didn't really have high expectations for when I first got it- just another dystopian story which had an okay sounding blurb. WHERE HAVE YOU GUYS GONE?Īs it turns out, at the back of charity book stores. Most of you were genuinely creepy and yet very relatable, and I could really see something that happened in your stories happening to the society we have in the future. An open letter to dystopians written before 'The Dystopocalypse'(and yes, that's what I'm calling it):
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