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Malorie Blackman wastes no time getting to the point. The book opens with an emotionally charged scene that introduces you to some of the key players while it simultaneously [and quite effortlessly] sets up their dynamic. In the first thirty pages we meet all the main characters [I think] and get a taste of what life is like on both ends of the spectrum. Written from the vantage points of both the protagonists the book is quick to establish the differences between the leads and their respective prospects in life.


The way Malory Blackman has chosen to address segregation, what concerns her protagonists and society at large, grounds the narrative and makes it feel realistic. Her characters are worried about education, employment, income inequality in much the same way that anyone of us is.



So? Perhaps what I like about this book is also what I ultimately dislike about this book- I don't see how it's unique- it doesn't really say anything unexpected or thought provoking [so far]. Apart from the physical switching of races, the narratives of the oppressed and the oppressive are unchanged and if I hadn't expressly been told about the physical change I would have no way of differentiating this book from several others that speak to the same issue. But I'm hoping that changes soon...




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Noughts and crosses is the first book of four in what is by all accounts a critically acclaimed series set in a 'racist dystopia'. From the reviews of it online I gather that the book follows two childhood friends from different [antagonistic] sects of society who fall in love and [by virtue of the falling] end up endangering themselves. I'm looking forward to reading this book [especially since all the reviews I've come across so far seem extremely favorable] but I'm also wondering what could possibly be said about this subject [in this format/with this premise] that hasn't been said before..

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So. This month I want to read and review all the aforementioned [afore-pictured?] books.
These books [and this image] are a part of the books reccomended by the Underrated book project-http://awordshaker.com/post/42579677189/the-underrated-books-project

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