Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Review of Scarlet (Lunar Chronicles, Bk 2)

Scarlet (Lunar Chronicles, Bk 2)
skywriter319 avatar reviewed on + 784 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1


Scarlet Benoits grandmother has gone missing. Everyone tells her to not worry about it, theres nothing she can do, her grandmother is an individualistic kind of person, but Scarlet thinks theres something more insidious behind her grandmothers disappearance. The only person who will help her is a soft-spoken street fighter named Wolf, whom Scarlet hopes she can trust, but who may have an agenda of his own. Answers are discovered, but more questions raised, when they cross paths with Cinder, whose recent and widely publicized escape from a New Beijing prison just might start the war that the ruthless Lunar Queen has been waiting for.

Cinder was my unexpected enjoyable find of last year. After experiencing how effortlessly Marissa Meyer can weave together a convoluted yet exciting tale, I had high demands for the sequel, SCARLET. And in a way, SCARLET fulfilled them. In a way, it didnt.

The good first: everything we liked about Cinder is in here, except perhaps even a notch better. In particular, the characters, old and new, major and supporting, are easy to cheer on. I mean, there are exceptions. Kais role is reduced to that of beleaguered new and helpless emperor under international pressure. Wolf, Im sorry to say, did not appeal to me so much, not because I didnt like his soft and shy personality (I did) so much as I have known many misunderstood love interests with wounded hearts of gold (see: many adult romance male leads). But when you weigh the slightly annoyingKai and Wolfagainst the goodCinders resourcefulness and empathic internal struggle, Scarlets ferocity at protecting her loved ones, Thornes much-appreciated airheaded charm lightening the mood)the good comes out on top.

That being said, one of the issues that some reviewers noted as a weakness in Cinder is even more apparent in SCARLET, and that is the world-building. I remember thinking the world-building in Cinder was decent, but in SCARLET I found it lacking. Dont get me wrong: Meyer does a Richelle Mead-worthy job of setting up an elaborate yet believable backstory to the worlds current state, the one involving the Lunars and Princess Selene. But settings-wise, inadequate research and/or thought was glaringly apparent. At no point did the scenes in France distinguish themselves from what couldve been going on in any other place in a future Earth. I wanted the book to show me its vision of what a future Earth divided into regions like the Eastern Commonwealth and European Federation, and experiencing strained relationships with Lunar, would look, feel, hear, taste, and smell like. What distinguishes Rieux, Scarlets hometown, from other places in the world? How does Paris fare several centuries from now, and how does its altered cityscape affect the characters movements and experiences?

Still, SCARLET was fast-paced and exciting. My attention started wavering around the end when everyone was running around killing each other in a very blankly drawn future Paris, but Im still curious enough about how the Lunar/Princess Selene conflict will play out that I think Ill continue to hang around this series. Read at the surface level, SCARLET is a successful rollicking good read. But I hope the series will pick up a bit on its world-building, for fear that those cracks will end up pulling the books down.