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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Book Review: Drought by Pam Bachorz

Drought by Pam Bachorz
Publisher: EgmontUSA
Publication date: January 2011
ISBN: 9781606840160
Source: ARC provided by publicist


Drought

Ruby has lived with her mother and the Congregants for two hundred years, stuck as slaves to Darwin West.  Every day, they gather water with spoons to fill the tanks.  Her mother encourages Ruby to wait on Otto to come and save them from West.  But Ruby has begun to feel that she can't wait for him to come save them anymore.  She is tired of the beatings and the hard, sometimes impossible work.  But, when she meets a new overseer who seems different from the rest, she must make a crucial decision between what she wants and what is best for everyone else.

Things I Liked:
An intense and pretty unique story.  It was not what I expected - for some reason I figured it for dystopian, but it felt more fantasy in our current day with just a touch of dystopian-ness.  I liked Ruby and how she grew over the course of the book.  I especially liked how she didn't take crap from any of the guys who were interested in her - even from the one she liked!  Her love interest was also most definitely not perfect, which I appreciated.  It made him more real.  The plot had some surprises and it certainly horrified me in multiple places.  It had a lot of food for thought about the things we accept in life and the things we can change.  Plus, it's got some action too.  And an ending that leaves you wondering.  Could be a stand alone or part of a series. 


Things I Didn't Like:
It was pretty slow for the first half of the book. Not much appeared to be taking place, but I think it was for background on Ruby, since we got to see how she thought then and how she changed.  I admit that parts of it made me uncomfortable, from a religious point of view.  Cults in general make people uncomfortable, I think.  The ending, while it kind of made sense that it ended Ruby's part of that story, left me with a lot of questions about the history of the congregants.  I'd be very interested in a prequel that explains her mother's relationships with Otto and Darwin West.  Lots of unanswered questions...


Read-alikes:
I had a hard time coming up with anything, but Candor by Pam Bachorz is by the same author (though, fairly different)

I often thought of The Chosen One by Carol Lynch Williams because of the polygamous colony with severe restrictions (though that one was very much contemporary and more powerful)

BOOK CONTENT RATINGS:
s-factor: !
some, not a lot


mrg-factor: X
a bit of innuendo


v-factor: ->->->->
 a lot, some quite brutal


Overall rating: ***

I've seen mixed reactions on this one. Does that make you more likely to read it or less likely?

If you buy through my Amazon linkage, I will get a very small percentage

2 comments :

  1. I felt much the same way about this book. I thought the first half was excruciatingly slow - the same thing day after day...

    I didn't have a problem with the religious aspect, but as I was reading it, I wondered if it would bother some people. And the whole thing about Otis just seemed kind of ridiculous to me.

    I don't know the answer to your question. I guess if I see lots of good reviews and only a couple mixed or bad, then I'll read the book. But if the bad outweigh the good, then I'll probably go for something else. There's always plenty of books on the pile that I'm sure I want to read, so the iffy ones rarely reach the top of the pile. Great review. Thanks.

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  2. Annette, Otto seemed really weird to me too - guy disappears in the night and we expect him to return and save us, why? I'm usually mixed when it comes to positive and negative reviews too. I've been seeing one book I was initially interested in get lots of negative reviews, so I'd decided to not bother. Then I saw one positive one. Huh.

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