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The Shadow Society [Hardcover]

Marie Rutkoski
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
RRP: £11.81
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux; 1 edition (16 Oct 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0374349053
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374349059
  • Product Dimensions: 21.9 x 14.9 x 3.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 930,318 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars A shade above 29 Jan 2013
Format:Hardcover
I began the Shadow Society with some hesitation having seen bloggers, whose opinions I've really grown to appreciate, hadn't been very happy with it. I was aware of the clichéd "new guy at school that girl can't stop obsessing over", but I felt that was something that wouldn't bother me, I'd be fine with that. Maybe low expectations paid off again, but this book was really for me. I was completely engrossed in it.

Darcy was abandoned outside a fire station when she was just five years old and has no recollections of her life before then. She has went from foster home to foster home her whole life, and is only now, settled enough with her foster mother to still going to the same school for the second year in a row.

She notices Conn on the first morning back to school, hard not to when there's a complete stranger staring at you like they hate you. Over the next few days, he starts trying to get to know her, and volunteers to be her partner for a science project. But his actions contradict the look in his eyes and he cringes at her touch. But as he seems to be warming up to her more, she realises that she's starting to like him too. And she kisses him. Suddenly, he's slapped handcuffs on her and all hell breaks loose. Darcy's life is torn apart again as she discovers that she's not human, she's a shade, and she's from an alter world.

Darcy has always had a difficult life in the foster care system and there's always seemed to be something a little off about her. But things get so much worse for her when she's arrested by Conn, who's a member of the IIB and taken to the alter world where everyone hates her and looks at her with disgust, and they just want to lock her up for the rest of her life.

Darcy is a strong willed character. It's tough and must be really scary, she has no one. Yet, she fights back against both systems that seem to just want to take her freedom away, the humans of the IIB and her own kind, the shades of the Shadow Society. She doesn't care about their war, she doesn't want to be on either side, she just wants to do what's right.

And while Conn does appear to be the bad guy, I liked him from the start. He's young, but tough, and excellent at his job. He listens to his gut and goes with what he believes in.

Darcy's friends are wonderful. Jims, Lily and Raphael, they're not present for most of the book but enough for me to get to like them and see how good they are. And while it was a tad on the unbelievable side, I still enjoyed the part they play in the ending of this book and the impact they have.

Overall, I was mostly happy with the world building, I would have liked some more information on exactly how the alter world was created. The split in worlds was caused by the Great Chicago Fire, but how, and why? And the people who live in the alter, how do they come to be there, are they people from the original world? The people in the alter world are aware of the original world, but not vice versa. This lack of knowledge didn't impact on my enjoyment of the story but it did leave me extremely curious.

The Shadow Society is a stand alone book, something I haven't read for quite a while. I'm happy about that in one way, no long wait for a sequel, but still slightly sad, as it would have been nice to have some more time with Conn and Darcy.
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Amazon.com: 3.9 out of 5 stars  46 reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Very Interesting Paranormal 22 Sep 2012
By S. McCullough - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
"The Shadow Society" was my first experience with reading a novel by Marie Rutkoski. I really ended up enjoying this novel and I hope there will be more stories in this world. The story is about a girl named Darcy who has no memory of her life before she was five years old. After being passed around several foster families she is now living with a single foster mom and they get along pretty well. She also has a great group of friends at school and she is pretty happy with everything except she wonders about her parents and how she came to be orphaned.

Then a mysterious boy named Conn shows up at school. At first he is distant but then they are paired together and begin work on a special project at school. Things start to heat up between them and Darcy starts to have feelings for him. I will admit at this part of the story I figured it was turning into another generic YA Paranormal boy meets girl love story. I may have even rolled my eyes a little bit. Oh me of little faith! Conn does something to betray Darcy and then reveals another world dimension to her that runs parallel to hers. And Darcy may have originated from it.

I don't want to give away any key plot points but I really enjoyed the book from here on. There are two different warring groups trying to destroy each other and Darcy ends up right in between them. She still has feelings for Conn but there is another boy who shows interest in her. Darcy struggles with unlocking the secrets of her first five years.

The story features new and unique paranormal creatures and a romance that takes a back seat to the mystery and adventure in the novel. The story also features a nice and complete conclusion although there are enough interesting ideas left to easily lead the way for a sequel. And I really hope there will be. I loved the ending of the story and the characters really evolved into some that I would love to see more of.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars The Ending that Broke the Book 16 Oct 2012
By Gretchen @ My Life is a Notebook - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Thanks to Macmillan Publishing and NetGalley for this eARC!

Lately, I've been very lucky to get my hands on books that started out mediocre but redeemed themselves in the end.

This is not one of those books.

In fact, the first part of this book was hankering for a higher rating. I'll admit, there was nothing entirely compelling about the characters from the get go, but the world and the plot was engrossing despite myself. I was sucked in and had a hard time finding stopping points for when I had to do things like school and work. This is always a very, very good sign.

I've mentioned that I dislike when books start at this really crucial point, only to back up at the beginning of the real first chapter-and that's what happened here. Still, I soldiered on and was rewarded. I'm an English major (well, that's half a double major, but I digress), so the whole theme of T. S. Eliot's The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock caused serious love from me. That was a touch I totally wasn't expecting from this paranormal romance. I was actually really surprised by the plot and the way that twisted, too, but ... well, I have a confession:

I totally forgot to reread the blurb before I read it. So, yeah. The whole Shade thing? BLEW MY MIND. (Remind me to never, ever get this backed up on reviews again.)

I did find the concepts of the two different Chicagos difficult to understand, and yeah that was after I figured out what was going on. I felt like I needed a little bit more explanation there. However, the Shade v. humans thing was really well established-as was the Shades themselves-so I didn't really mind as much because man Shades are COOL.

Given the clarity of the whole Shade thing, I was really invested in the plot, even if the characters were fairly one-dimensional. The romance wasn't overly terrible or overly exciting, but it fit into the plot nicely and didn't overpower it. I was humming along, ready to give this sucker about four stars or so.

Then some things right before the ending happened. And my suspension of disbelief was broken and I was tossed from the story, quite rudely.

The problem is, I can't tell you what happened.

The point of the matter is, though, that some fairly improbable things occurred towards then end, and then things fell together far too easily. The ending was confusing and entirely unrealistic. There is no WAY Darcy and Co could have what happened to them after all the tension and fighting in the rest of the book. There is just NO. WAY. After the seamless run of the rest of the book, I was greatly disappointed and the rating of the book dropped an entire star. I don't even understand if the ending was setting up for a sequel or not. Goodreads certainly doesn't have any information on such a thing, though that certainly isn't gospel. All in all, the ending turned an enjoyable book into a confusing one and left me with a very different impression than the one I had for most of the book.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Can I get a Dictionary and a Sequel to go with this? 19 Nov 2012
By Inky - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This book has a very intriguing premise. It drew me in and I really enjoyed this book. I can't say I loved it or hated it, but it sits right in the middle place, where all the books you liked goes. So I had things I liked and things I didn't like.

Let us begin with Darcy, the MC. She has a cool name that made me think of Colin Firth the whole book, but otherwise it was good. So she doesn't know anything about what happened before she turned 5 and was put into the Foster Care system. But that all changes the day she sees this mysterious guy at school. I felt like at the beginning she was easy to understand and connect to, her quest for self-discovery, and what her past was. But where were a few times when she was just so.....not as gripping? I didn't feel like I ever hated her, there were just some parts where there were lapses in character development. But on the whole I thought Darcy was a nice MC.

Okay so Conn is obviously a big part of this book. And I just had to laugh because he literally is a Con-man. :P Oh the irony. I'm not sure what to think about Conn. He's mysterious for sure, and he's hot, but I felt I was missing part of him. So much of the book is left untold about him during the times we question his loyalty that I wish it was told in his perspective.

Especially since I think this book is meant to be a stand-alone. Which I base all my dislikes on. This book idea has the potential to at least have a sequel. I think it would have been better that way. Room for more things. I think it felt a little rushed and confusing when things came to and end and when we first meet and learn about the society. That WHOLE BOOK, I kept asking myself. "Why?" What is the motivation behind this? Why are they trying to do that? What happened between these two groups of people to ignite this fight? WHY? It was rather annoying not to find out when the questions were the base of the conflict.

I did really like the romantic nature of the plot. It does start pretty quick but then takes a sharp twist about 100 pages in. That gave to some unique things and changes to happen, and I pretty forgot that it was almost -well-kinda-was- insta-love at the beginning of the book. Darn you insta-loves. It was a very interesting concept on the whole and one that I would love to explore even more. Sadness about stand-alones. ;)

Soo, my overall thoughts were something along the lines of: Eeping awesome read! Yay so fun. Hot guys, Ghosts, but WHY? Why this? Why that? You can't have this happen without an explanation. Grr. But I still love you Conn.

Content: Mild
(A few instances of language and innuendo. Kisses)
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