![]() ![]() Violet’s opinions about society and consumerism can be applied to today which is also disconcerting. Aside from that, Anderson does an excellent job of suggesting a terrifying and very plausible future for the world. For language… and mild sexual situations” (234 Anderson). In Titus’s words, their story is “rated PG-13. His vibrant counterpart, Violet, makes up for his slang and colourful word choice, but her unique way of seeing the dying world cannot make up for the confusing start and more than colorful use of language. The main character, Titus, narrates the futuristic tale, but his vocabulary is quite limited. Yes, it truly brings you on a roller coaster of emotions and left me with a strong sense of catharsis, but between the confusing teenage slang sprinkled with foul language and awkward hormonal encounters, it was interesting but lacked spectacularity. However, out of all them, Feed lands somewhere in the middle. I have read my share of YA books, both meaningful journies inducing a strong sense of catharsis and ridiculous romances bringing my gag reflex some practice. Out of the other 72 books I want to read by the end of the summer, I read Feed first. ![]() ![]() Feed by Matthew Tobin Anderson was a YA book on the top of my summer reading list. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |