Crossed, the second book in the Matched dystopian series,
picks up where we left off, with Cassia off in search of Ky, Ky’s life in
question in the Outer Providences, and with the beginnings of a rebellion
against the dictatorial Society.
Like with Shades of Grey, one of the biggest issues is
that I don’t buy into the main premise. Why would the Society force these
things on people? None of it makes any sense. This shouldn’t surprise me though,
because the Society is not the main plotline of the book. That is of course,
the love triangle. As with Matched, Crossed’s
biggest focus is on the Ky-Xander-Cassia issue, instead of on the more
interesting rebellion against the Society. This rubs me the wrong way, and is
my biggest complaint about the series. It’s clearly geared towards the Twilight
crowd, but with even less of an outside plot and not very interesting writing
(Cassia and Ky love each other SO MUCH! But Cassia might also love Xander! But
Ky and Cassia write and recite poems to each other! They love art! The Society
doesn’t like it! These seem to be the things that the author most wants us to
focus on).
It is also really irritating how the author constantly
refers to things that the reader doesn’t know about. Instead of keeping me invested, like it does
with most other books, it frustrates me. When half of the book keeps referring
to “Xander’s secret” like it’s some life changing thing with the stupidest,
most obvious explanation being a “big reveal,” I am not interested, I am
annoyed.
Yet, here I am, finishing the book in mere days. I don’t
understand how this happened.
2- for some reason I still flew through this book, despite
all the complaints. I still want to know where we’re going to end up in this
series. Don’t ask me why because I don’t know. I think it’s because I am a
sucker for any YA book about a dystopic future. I’m still not in a hurry to read the next one
though.
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