Pages:
342
Publisher:
Harper Collins
Children’s Books
Release
Date: 7th
May 2015
Edition:
UK paperback,
purchased
Princess
Eadlyn has grown up hearing endless stories about how her mother and father
met. Twenty years ago, America Singer entered the Selection and won the heart
of Prince Maxon – and they lived happily ever after.
Eadlyn
doesn’t expect her own story to end in romance – she has no interest in
repeating the fairy tale. But a princess’s life is never entirely her own – and
Eadlyn cannot escape her very own Selection, and one particular entry who may
just capture her heart…
The Selection series is one of my favourite guilty pleasure series’ so I
was rather chuffed to hear that there’d be a book four and five, starring the
next generation of the Illéa royal family. The
Heir was a solid follow-up to American and Maxon’s story.
With Maxon and America’s oldest,
Eadlyn, at the helm, The Heir feels
like a very different story to the original trilogy. For one, it no longer even
hints at a dystopia for me. If I hadn’t read the earlier and went in with this
one (which you totally could, I think) I would have just assumed they live in a
palace with some strange customs and the regular people are just rioting about
how unfair life is. Even with the changes in Illéa since Maxon took the throne,
it didn’t have that distinctive dystopian feel. The caste system has slowly
been dissolved and the people are free from restrictions; they are able to take
whatever career they wish and marry without restriction. But it’s not as
perfect as it should be – the prejudice of the caste system is still widely
seen. This world has so much potential and I never feel like Cass properly
exploits that.
As a teenager princess, Eadlyn
can’t really do much about this yet, other than watch her dad get more and more
tired and stressed and so she agrees to have a Selection to boost morale while
Maxon and America try to find a solution. It was really interesting to see the
Selection from the other side. The balancing of her royal duties with the
weekly Report and making a genuine
effort to date and get to know 35 different boys, all while dealing with her
feelings about the Selection itself, the people of Illéa and trying to keep a
hold on her heart. I did actually find Eadlyn to be a little annoying in the
beginning, but she really grew over the course of the novel. Her motivations
and what lay under her cold, sometimes rude and selfish persona became more
apparent and it was a lot easier to be on her side.
Eadlyn has a grit about her, a
depth that has so many possibilities and she’ll undoubtedly do some awesome
things for Illéa when her turn comes, but she’s still a teenage girl. I loved
the balance between the princess and the girl and the way her brothers and
parents brought that out in her. There’s a real sense of a strong, loving and
supportive family in The Heir and it
just made me so proud of America and Maxon! They did it. The reverence for the King
and Queen, from both those in the palace and the public was clear. Their story
is a fairytale and the things they achieved together are wonderful; and they’re
so obviously still head over heels in love. I also have to say that I love
middle-aged, Queen America a whole lot more than I did teenage, Selection
America; the difference is huge.
I don’t want to say too much
about Eadlyn’s experience of her Selection and the boys in it, but I will say
that it’s a lot more dramatic and a lot stronger, actually, than Maxon’s. Everything
feels heightened and way more intense, but there’s also some real humour in it.
In The Selection I was only ever
rooting for America, but I actually like quite a few of the boys vying for
Eadlyn’s hand. I am, however, Team Erik. I want it to happen, and I really
think it might. That’s the kind of choice that would totally suit Eadlyn and
one that Maxon and America would secretly approve of, I reckon – they’re all
about the fairytale and soul mates.
Kiera Cass delivered a thoroughly
good fun companion in The Heir and I’m
really looking forward to book five and all the drama that’s bound to come with
it!
Sophie
Reading this one at the moment. I'm struggling with Eadlyn's terrible attitude problem, but I'm hoping it will improve by the end, and you've given me hope! Love your thoughts on it.
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