“Exciting premise. Poor Execution ”
I was sent an advanced copy of this book by the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for my honest feedback
My, my, my where to begin. This is one of those really difficult books to review because it wasn't that bad, but is also wasn't that great.
Shatter Me follows 17-year-old Juliette who cannot touch or be touched by anyone. The last time she did, she killed someone so has been locked up by the Reestablishment for a murder that she had no control over. 264 lonely days later and the Reestablishment has had a change of heart. Why lock her up when she could be their greatest weapon.
To sum Shatter Me up in as little words as possible I would say that it's basically X-Men 1 meets X-Men: First Class. X1 because Juliette, like Rogue, has he ability to harm people with her touch/skin and First Class because, like Erik/Magneto, Juliette had no idea that she wasn't alone. Now, I like X-Men, so you'd think I'd be all over this. There are just a lot of tiny things that bug me.
Firstly, next-to-nothing happens. I don't think anything of any real substance happened within the first 20%. It also felt really repetitive. It just kept saying the same thing over-and-over instead of moving on or going forward, you'd keep going back to the same thing. I get it, you've introduced Juliette, she's basically in solitary confinement, can't touch anyone, thinks she knows the guy that has been put in her cell with her, I get it. That is literally all that happens within the first 20%.
Secondly, I'm starting to think I'm just not one for dystopian characters or something because I found Juliette to be a really poor lead. I'm really trying to not say basic, but there just wasn't anything stand-out about her other than her ability. She also seemed to go from being quite strong to quite weak in a matter of pages. It made it hard to find either believable.
In addition, Adam. I don't think I've ever not taken to a character so much in a while. Fake is the only word that comes to mind. He doesn't feel authentic and I almost found myself waiting for him to double-cross Juliette. He's a very personality-less character and if there's one thing that may top my bookish pet peeve list it is characters over-using "I love you". Is this a dystopian trait? Because I seem to find it here more than anywhere else. It is made slightly more bearable with the knowledge that Juliette and Adam have known each other for a few years, but it still doesn't erase the fact that you have two 17-year-olds who, up until the events of the book, had not even spoke one word to each other saying "I love you" every few pages. They've barely spoke to each other and other than the obvious they know nothing else about each other. They also have zero chemistry which is a must if you're going to have characters be so 'in love' this quickly.
However, of course the most interesting and entertaining character would have to be the sociopathic villain, because why would any of the heroes get the best dialogue or personality. Honestly, Warner is, not surprisingly, one of the few things this book has going for it. He's honest, powerful, slightly crude. Sort of reminds me of the Darkling in The Grisha Trilogy. Very demanding presence and, as I said, had the best lines of dialogue. I didn't particularly care about Juliette or Adam but I was really drawn to Warner and really wanted to see and learn more about him.
Furthermore, the writing was very metaphorical which I didn't mind so much in the beginning, but does get quite annoying. Something that also gets annoying is the constant repetition of words. I read the kindle edition and at first thought this must have been a typo, but then it kept happening, and happening again, and again: "and then and then and then..." it got incredibly irritating. If it was used once or may be twice, it probably wouldn't have been a problem, but I just fail to see why Tahereh Mafi kept doing it. This is the first book I've read of hers, so maybe its a thing she does. But, there was just too much of everything. The repetition, the metaphors, the strike-through. Was any of it necessary?
The overall descriptions was...something. As far as character description goes, this is...I don't even know. I think it was about 95% before I even discovered what colour Juliette's hair was. I get the fact that she hasn't looked in a mirror for a while but come on, you can't forget the colour of your hair especially if it's long which I'm assuming Juliette's is. Now, where Juliette's physical appearance was only briefly mentioned Mafi seemed to always take a lot of time describing the men. Seriously?. There's over-the-top and then there's this. I get it, Adam's eyes are blue, Warner's eyes are green. Emerald green, sky blue. That was all you needed. 2 buckets of rainwater, deep, fresh, clear was not necessary. Rein it in. Way in.
There was quite a lack of world-building and to say I expected more is putting it lightly. You were given bits at the beginning, but that was it. And those bits didn't really carry that much weight. I would have liked more. Something else I would have liked more on; the Reestablishment. Of the top of my head I can't really tell you anything about them, because I don't remember anything. I think Warner is in it. I'm thinking his dad is like a higher up or whatever and I'm assuming they are the 'bad guys'. That is all I got. They're clearly bad enough to prompt some from of revolution/rebellion, but I don't really know why. Either nothing was majorly said on them, or it was said just not clear enough for me to pick up on.
Overall, Shatter Me is rather bland and fails to leave a long-lasting impression. The 'meh' grade main characters didn't help. Yes, Kenji was a nice bit of comic relief, but he came in a bit too late to save the flailing and awkward romance. The writing is ultimately what held this book back and dragged it down. I can stand 'meh' characters is the writing is great. However, despite everything, I still find myself to be quite curious. I want to learn more about Warner and I'd actually like to know more about the Reestablishment.
The premise is interesting, but poorly executed. Yet, I remain slightly intrigued.
Paperback edition
This reviewer received a free of charge product for review.