Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Birthmarked by Caragh M. O'Brien

It seems as if the flood of teen fiction about the either vampires, zombies or werewolves is starting to ebb, and dystopian fiction is all the rage. Usually there has been some cataclysmic event in the past and a new society has emerged. The society is usually ruled by a government who is ensuring that the past doesn't repeat itself. Once good, often the ruling party becomes entrenched in enforcing rules and regulations. Until someone, usually the protagonist, begins to question the rules. The choices the main character make effect both their lives and the lives of those around them.

Birthmarked is set in a future after some catastrophic environmental event has left the world harsh and dry. A society has been established within a walled city called the Enclave. Gaia Stone and her parents live in a town which as assembled outside the walled city. The city provides them with some food, limited water and basic healthcare. Without this, those outside would not survive. In return the walled city asks for a quota of babies to be “advanced” into the privileged society within the walled city. Gaia is starting to learn her mother's trade, that of a midwife, in helping the women in her sector deliver babies and 'advancing' the first 3 babies she delivers each month into the walled city. After delivering her first baby, Gaia comes home to find that her parents have been arrested and taken to prison within the Enclave. Wanting to find her parents, who have been so loyal to the Enclave, Gaia finds a way into the Enclave. She discovers that the society that she believed to be ideal and wonderful is not all it appears to be, and that the Enclave is genetically damaged. She hold a key to deciphering the genetic problems of the Enclave. Gaia needs to decide whether the answer will help society or give the Enclave further opportunities to restrict the society they have created.

Loved the book and the dystopian society it creates. Gaia is a strong-willed heroine who will do all she can to right what wrongs she sees in the world. However, the world is never black and white, throw a love interest into the mix, and decisions become harder for her to make. I could relate to the book as it reflected how I was as a teenager and some of the decisions that I had to make. As a teenager I was very 'black and white', things and situations were either wrong or right. This created lots of tension as not much in life is 'black and white' and I had to learn to make decisions in a grey world.

8/10