Beatrice Prior is about to turn sixteen. This is the day when she has to choose which of the five factions in society she wants to belong to for the rest of her life. Beatrice and her brother have been raised in Abnegation, the self sacrificing and selfless people in society. The other four factions are Erudite (the intellectual, who all seem kind of snobby), Amity (the peaceful and apparently the ones who grow all the food), Candor (the honest, they cannot actually lie) and Dauntless (the brave – to the point of stupidity). After taking an aptitude test, each teenager will be told what faction they are best suited for. If they don’t make it through the initiation of their chosen faction, they become part of the Factionless, who live on the streets and do the absolutely worst jobs in society to get food. Beatrice’s test results are inconclusive, and she displays strong traits of three different factions. This apparently makes her Divergent and she is told never to reveal her results to anyone. When she has to make her choice, Beatrice chooses Dauntless and is shocked to discover that her brother, who has always seemed like he embodies all the values of Abnegation, chooses Erudite.
The Dauntless all dress in black, tend to have piercings and tattoos and don’t travel through the city (a post-apocalyptic version of Chicago) in any normal way. Nope, they jump onto and off moving trains. Three Dauntless initiates die before they even make it to the Dauntless compound. Beatrice decides to reinvent herself and calls herself Tris. On the plus side, Dauntless initiates are allowed to eat exciting food, use mirrors and wear clothes that aren’t just shapeless grey sacks. On the minus side, only a select few will make it through the initiation tests. The rest will either die or become Factionless. There’s physical and mental ordeals, and the initiates have to learn how to use firearms, knives and to beat the crap out of each other. They get injected with a strange serum and have to face their fears in a trancelike state. Apparently, Tris’ Divergent state makes her realise that she’s hallucinating, and she beats the tests really quickly. This worries Four, her hunky, yet brooding trainer, and he is worried that someone is going to figure out that Tris isn’t just any old recruit.
As Tris, despite being pretty small and timid to begin with, seems to do really well in the initiation tests, it becomes clear that civil unrest is starting to erupt outside the compound. The Erudite leaders are claiming that the Abnegation leaders are corrupt and hoarding resources, depriving the other factions. There’s clearly bad things afoot, but Tris is more concerned with her growing attraction to Four.
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Surprised you hadn’t read this yet! (It seems like you read everything.)
I admit to being very caught up in the fast-moving plot when I first read this, and I really enjoyed it. But yeah — the shine definitely comes off in the second and third books and you’re right to skip them. In fact, I even re-read this one after finishing the whole series — based on my hypothesis that the quality had gone really downhill with the subsequent books — and it didn’t hold up to my memory at all.
Nope, I had it on my shelf for ages, and just never got round to it. But September was Books to Movies month in my Monthly Motif challenge and that motivated me to read a whole bunch of books I’ve been putting off.
I keep telling myself I should read The Maze Runner as well, as that’s a dystopian sci-fi aimed more at boys, and as a secondary school teacher it’s important to keep up to date with what is cool and fun to read for the kids. But I just can’t be bothered. Now that the final Heroes of Olympus< book is finally out, I will be reading those books. I’m really rather bored with all the dystopia. What’s wrong with slightly more upbeat adventure and action?
I hear you on dystopia. And honestly, it pains me to agree with you because I really love dystopias, or the idea of them, anyway. It’s just a genre that pings on my radar. But now we’re at market saturation and most of them just aren’t good. I think Divergent was lucky enough to be still among the vanguard, so it got a lot more publicity than many of the (multitude of) others that followed. But that didn’t mean it was good, and I’m definitely guilty of buying into the hype just because dystopias are like crack for me.