Top ChoiceĀ byĀ Sophie McAloon
Book stats:
Genre(s):Ā Young Adult, dystopian, romance
Medium: Print
Number of pages:Ā 330
Publish date: April 16th,Ā 2018
Purchase:Ā AmazonĀ –Ā Book Depository
As a future leader of the female-led regime her grandmother fought hard to establish, Alice Kearns is no stranger to pressure. Being the best in a society where women are expected to be high-achieving is the only option her powerful mother has ever accepted for her, and now that Aliās a senior in high school, the pressure to succeed is greater than ever. But fortunately, as of her eighteenth birthday, Ali has a place to blow off steam: sheās finally allowed into the Choice Clubs.
Filled with an enticing mix of music, drinks and gorgeous guys, the Choice Clubs were founded to ensure that smart girls wouldnāt get distracted in their real lives by anything as trivial as a shallow crush or a pretty face. Choice guys are fun, flirty, and the perfect eye candy, but Ali would never dream of actually falling for oneāuntil she meets Tag.
Tag McPhail is Top Choice. With his mischievous grin and chiseled abs, he is exactly the kind of boy that Aliās mother believes needs to be kept contained. But after he kisses Ali at the Choice Club, she suddenly sees him everywhereāand sheās surprised to learn that thereās more to him than his perfect looks. Tag is sweeter, smarter, and funnier than Ali ever expected⦠and, she soon discovers, heās also dangerous. Because Tag leads a double life: when heās not working at the clubs, heās leading a rebel group trying to overturn the girl power society that the women in Aliās family have worked so hard to put in place.
Getting closer to Tag upends everything Ali thought she knew. But will she betray everything she was raised to protect for a guy sheās not even sure she can trust?
In the current setting of politics and shows likeĀ The Handmaid’s Tale, this book was quite the interesting shift in perspective. Too often we see dystopians where female characters are put down and treated improperly, but what if it was the other way around? There is plenty of objectifying of not just women but men as well, so what if it was all combined in a future society?
That premise alone is what drew me to this book. The writing style was well done and easy to follow. I enjoyed the descriptions of setting and character, and McAloon seems to be able to get into her character’s heads well. She did well with fitting her character’s attitudes and personalities to the society they’ve grown up in, instead of taking characters that existed in today’s society and tried to fit them with a future government.
There were plenty of surprises to keep me on my toes which I highly enjoyed. There’s always a rebel group going against power in futuristic settings, and this one is no different. But the fact that the main love interest has a double life just brings depth to his character instead of him being the typical ‘cute boy’ stereotype that the others like him seem to fall into.
Overall, great work. Would definitely read this one again.
I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review.
Rating:
I am a Book Depository affiliate. ClickĀ hereĀ to purchase books through my link and get free shipping worldwide.
Skillshare is an online community full of amazing classes and brilliant teachers. Try out two free months with my codeĀ here!