Red Queen is a young adult dystopian fantasy romance novel written by American writer Victoria Aveyard.[1] Published in February 2015, it was her first novel and first series.[2][3] Aveyard followed up with three sequels: Glass Sword, King's Cage and War Storm.[4] Red Queen won the 2015 Goodreads Choice Award for Debut Goodreads Author and was nominated for the 2015 Goodreads Choice Award for Young Adult Fantasy & Science Fiction.[5]

Red Queen
AuthorVictoria Aveyard
LanguageEnglish
GenreYoung adult
PublisherHarperTeen
Publication date
2015
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback)
Pages388
ISBN978-1-4091-5072-5

Plot

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In a year known as the New Era, people are divided by blood- those with Red and those with Silver, the latter of which having supernatural abilities, which made them superior, wealthy, and nearly gods, opposite to the lowly, impoverished Reds, who worked as servants to the Silvers and were often conscripted, usually after their eighteenth birthday if they had no job or apprenticeship, into a war between the kingdoms of the Lakelands and Norta.

Seventeen-year-old Mare Barrow is a Red and a thief living with her parents, Daniel and Ruth, and younger sister, Gisa, in a village known as the Stilts. Mare's older brothers, Bree, Tramy, and Shade, currently serve in the front line of the war. Mare is jealous of Gisa, because her skill in sewing would earn her a job working for the Silvers as a seamstress, meaning she would be safe from conscription. When Mare learns that her best friend, Kilorn Warren, will be conscripted after the death of his master, she plans an escape and meets with a colleague, Will Whistle, who directs her to a woman named, Farley, who as the captain of the Scarlet Guard, a rebel group composed of Reds who want to bring equality between their people and the Silvers. Farley demands two thousand crowns in exchange for Kilorn's and Mare's escape.

Mare plans to steal from a Silver place, known as Summerton, when live reports announce that the Scarlet Guard had bombed several buildings. This results in all the Silvers in Summerton to become violent. When she learns that Mare was unable to get what she needed, Gisa tries to help by attempting to pickpocket a fleeing Silver. However, this results in her hand being broken, forcing her to quit her job. Unable to bear the guilt she feels towards her sister, Mare goes to a tavern and began stealing from random people to occupy her thoughts. While there, she gets sloppy and is caught while attempting to steal from a boy. Surprisingly, instead of turning her in, he gives her some money for her return home. He informs her that his name is Cal and he works as a servant at the palace. He walks her home and listens as she informs him of the recent events. He gives her another coin out of pity and leaves. The next day, Mare is taken to the King's local residence and given a job as a kitchen servant. She discovers that Cal is Tiberias Calore VI's son, Crown Prince Tiberias Calore VII, who granted her her work in the palace in order to protect her from conscription. During the Queenstrial, where the Silver's nobilities most powerful daughters compete for Cal's hand in marriage, Mare accidentally displays electrokinetic powers against a girl, Evangeline Samos, who would eventually become Cal's intended bride. She is captured, but because the king fears of an uprising should a Red be discovered to have supernatural powers, Mare is engaged of Tiberias' second son, Maven, given the name Mareena Titanos, and a cover story: the daughter of a Silver general who died on the battle field and was adopted by the Reds at the war front. Mare feels torn as she realizes she is in love with Cal, her betrothed's brother and the future Silver king. However, she soon grows to develop feelings for Maven instead.

Suddenly having to live as a royal within the king's ranks, Mare slowly acquaints herself with Maven and Cal while also befriending Julian Jacos, Cal's uncle and a librarian who teaches her how to control her powers. Mare is permitted to say goodbye to her family by Cal and learns the return of her brothers, Bree and Tramy, but not Shade, who was beheaded by Silver officers for reported desertion. Furious that her favorite brother was killed, Mare joins the Scarlet Guard. While meeting with Farley to discuss plans, Mare is infuriated when she learns that Kilorn joined, and surprised when she sees that Maven joined as well. This new revelation brings Mare and Maven closer together and they become lovers. The plan involves disrupting a royal ball and killing several important Silvers. However, an unexpected and mysterious bomb goes off, killing many innocents in the process, and also resulting in the capture of Kilorn, Farley, and other members of the Scarlet Guard. Though the rebels are able to be freed thanks to Julian's help, Mare is alarmed when she learns that Farley was not responsible for the bomb dropped at the palace. The bomb gave Silvers the ability to paint the Scarlet Guard as dangerous murderers to the public.

Due to the attack made by the Scarlet Guard, the Reds are punished by the Silvers with the lowering of the age of conscription from eighteen to fifteen. Mare herself is ordered to broadcast the new law. Julian confesses that his research concludes that Mare's blood has a genetic mutation, allowing for a person with red blood to have Silver-like powers, and be stronger than both; furthermore, she is not the only one with the mutation. Shade also had the mutation, which was why he was executed; the only reason Mare was spared was because her powers manifested while she was viewed by many Silver onlookers, thus preventing a cover-up. Julian also mentions that he needs to go into hiding so he leaves Mare a list of names of people like her. After another meeting with Farley in a free zone that the Silvers have been avoiding, Mare, at Maven's suggestion, infiltrates the king's residence in the capital, Archeon. There, through the underground-roaming Undertrains, the rebels stake an invasion. Mare attempts to convince Cal to allow the Scarlet Guard overtake the castle, and admits to helping them. Cal, stung by her betrayal, refuses and arrests both Mare and Maven, leading them to the castle. However, once in the presence of Queen Elara and King Tiberius, Queen Elara reveals that she and Maven have been manipulating Mare the whole time in a plot to grant Maven the title of King and murder Cal. Maven hints that he and his mother caused the explosion to paint the Scarlet Guard in a bad light. Elara then uses her power of mind control to force Cal to kill his father on live television, thus branding him and Mare traitors and allowing Maven to be crowned king instead. It is also revealed that Elara had indirectly killed Tiberias's first wife, Queen Coriane, many years ago in order to gain more power.

Mare and Cal are sentenced to death and put in an arena with their powers stifled. Mare and Cal battle their former sparring partners, including Evangeline, and manage to kill a few Silvers before they retreat. They are rescued by the Scarlet Guard and they escape by the Undertrain before Maven can stop them. Inside it, Mare meets with Farley, Kilorn, and, to her shock, Shade, who had faked his death and is also a part of the Scarlet Guard. Mare vows to take revenge against Maven, and use the list she acquired from Julian to seek out others like her.

Characters

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  • Mare Barrow: A seventeen-year-old girl who is a Red and steals for a living, but the discovery that she holds supernatural powers causes many to try to vie for her allegiance. Mare holds tremendous electrokinetic powers, which she uses to either absorb or release lightning. Thus explaining her nickname, the "little lightning girl."
  • Tiberias "Cal" Calore VII: The elder son and heir of King Tiberias Calore VI through his first wife, Queen Coriane Jacos. Though he is engaged to Evangeline Samos, he is in love with Mare, a fact that she uses to further her goals in the Scarlet Guard. He is a Burner, which means his Silver powers allow him to manipulate fire. He doesn't get along with Mare's best friend Kilorn.
  • Maven Calore: King Tiberias VI's second son through his second wife, Elara Merandus, and thus Cal's half-brother. He is shy, but Mare's sudden engagement with him makes him open up. Like Cal and his father, Maven has the ability to control flames. Maven is deeply jealous of Cal, partly because he thought his brother had won Mare's heart, the way he had won their father's. In contrast, Mare had preferred Maven over Cal.
  • Diana Farley: A captain of the Scarlet Guard who leads them in the campaigns against the Silvers. She is strongly dedicated to the cause.
  • Tiberias Calore VI: The current king of Norta who has married twice, producing two sons: Cal and Maven. He holds the ability to manipulate fire, which he passed to both of his sons.
  • Elara Merandus: The mysterious and sadistic current queen of Norta and the mother of Maven. Mare dislikes her since the very start of their meeting. She is able to read and manipulate people with the ability known as Whispering.
  • Julian Jacos: A royal librarian and the brother of Cal's deceased mother, Coriane, making him his uncle. He is the last known person to hold the power of a Singer: being able to control people through his voice.
  • Evangeline Samos: A haughty girl who is made Cal's fiancée after being declared the best of the aspiring princesses. She holds a grudge against Mare, particularly after the latter humiliates her by expending her electrokinesis and repelling her magnetic manipulation, a trait of the House Samos.
  • Kilorn Warren: Mare's best friend and an apprentice of fishing. Mare seems content to eventually become his wife, until her engagement with Maven makes them drift apart. The attempt to spare him of conscription is the catalyst of much of the novel's plot. He doesn't get along with Cal.
  • Lucas Samos: Evangeline's cousin who, like her, holds the power of magnetic manipulation. He is one of the few Silvers whom Mare befriends and trusts with certainty.
  • Rane Arven: The instructor for the Silver Elites who has the ability to negate the powers of other people, known as Silencing.
  • Ptolemus Samos: Evangeline's older brother. Like her, he is a Magnetron, able to manipulate metal.
  • Sara Skonos: A friend of Julian who works as a nurse with her ability to heal people, known as Skin Healing. She seems to know the truth behind the death of Cal's mother, Queen Coriane, and Elara thus punished her by mutilating her tongue, making her mute.
  • Tristan: Farley's loyal right-hand man in the Scarlet Guard. He is killed by Ptolemus Samos when caught in the attack on the Hall.
  • Ann Walsh: A member of the Scarlet Guard who is about the same age as Mare. She works as a servant in Mare's room in the Hall and tells Mare the time of the midnight meeting with the Scarlet Guard. On the attack of the Hall, she is captured but escapes with Farley and Kilorn. While making sure the way is clear for Mare and the others to come back to the Whitefire Palace, she is captured and commits suicide with a pill before the queen is able to interrogate her. Her last words were "For Tristan".
  • Gisa Barrow: Mare's 14-year-old sister who works as an apprentice for a seamstress, until her broken hand terminates her from the job.
  • Mare's other family members consist of a war-weary father, a homemaker mother, and three older brothers: the hunky but unperceptive Bree, the sycophantic Tramy, and the lean but smart Shade. Out of the three, Mare is the closest to Shade, who is 19 years old.
  • Coriane Jacos: The late wife of Tiberias Calore VI and sister to Julian Jacos. Coriane was known as the "Singer Queen" because the Jacos house were Singers. Queen Elara did not like Coriane becoming queen so Elara murdered Coriane and took the crown, killing Tiberias at the end of the book.

Reception

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Red Queen has been generally well received. The Guardian gave the novel four stars.[6] Vilma Gonzalez of USA Today described the novel positively, revealing that "Aveyard’s compelling debut is richly imagined, addictive, chilling and suspenseful. She breathes new life into her own unique Game of Thrones story enlivened by exciting, character-driven plot twists that have me clamoring for more. This scintillating tale of betrayals and blood-spattered crowns is not to be missed."[7]

However, Grand Forks Herald's Cassidy Anderson stated "Ultimately, this book was over-hyped. It's still a fun read as long as you are not looking for anything with a lot of depth or meaning to it."[8] The Christian Science Monitor described the book as a dystopian novel.[9]

Kirkus Reviews saw "An inventive, character-driven twist breathes new life into tired fantasy trends."[10]

Publishers Weekly found "There’s an unmistakable feeling of deja vu to this first installment in the Red Queen trilogy, which shares several plot points and similarities with the Hunger Games series, ... Fortunately, Aveyard’s conclusion leaves the story poised to depart from this derivative setup."[11]

Common Sense Media wrote "With its courageous protagonist, action-packed plot, and romantic possibilities, Red Queen is a winning series start for fantasy and dystopia lovers."[12]

Adaptations

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Gennifer Hutchison, a writer and producer on Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad, was hired in 2015 by Universal Pictures to adapt the novel into a feature film. Pitch Perfect 2 director Elizabeth Banks was in talks with the studio to direct and produce the project.[13]

In May 2021, it was reported that Peacock is in developing a television series adaptation of novel. Banks is set to direct and also set to star in a supporting role.[14]

References

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  1. ^ "What should I read next?". The Guardian.
  2. ^ "Red Queen is familiar fantasy fare". USA Today.
  3. ^ "6 Awesome YA Books Coming In February". The Huffington Post. 9 February 2015.
  4. ^ "'Red Queen': Exclusive Sequel Cover Reveal and Movie News". 7 July 2015.
  5. ^ "Red Queen (Red Queen, #1)". Goodreads. Retrieved 2015-12-18.
  6. ^ "Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard – review". The Guardian. 2 September 2015.
  7. ^ Gonzalez, Vilma (February 9, 2015). "'Red Queen' by Victoria Aveyard". USA Today.
  8. ^ "BOOK REVIEW: Victoria Aveyard's 'Red Queen' an underwhelming read". Grand Forks Herald. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-09-09.
  9. ^ Driscoll, Molly (February 27, 2015). "'Red Queen' sells well – but is it different enough from other YA dystopian fare?". Christian Science Monitor.
  10. ^ "Red Queen". www.kirkusreviews.com. Kirkus Media LLC. 11 November 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  11. ^ "Red Queen". Publishers Weekly. PWxyz LLC. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  12. ^ "Red Queen". Common Sense Media. Common Sense Media Inc. Archived from the original on 6 July 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  13. ^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (2015-06-11). "'Pitch Perfect 2' Helmer Elizabeth Banks Circles is to 'Red Queen' To Direct". Deadline. Retrieved 2017-11-16.
  14. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (May 25, 2021). "Elizabeth Banks To Direct & Co-Star In 'Red Queen' Drama Based On Book In Works At Peacock". Deadline Hollywood.
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