


The book is engrossing but is best recommended Still, even new readers will want to plow through to the end and clarify They read Pawn first, as the brisk exposition is a little confusing. Romance, too, but no love triangle (yet). Setting provides ample opportunity for intrigue and drama. The severity and violence behind its class divisions, but that same The future America of the novel seems far-fetched in Most of the trouble she gets herself into seems to come of her own poorĭecision making. This makes her sympathetic, although at times frustrating, as Is desperate to be her own person but is tied to the people who are To call Captive a fast-paced read would be a huge understatement.Ĭarter keeps the action coming in each chapter, with a protagonist who

Hopes of being released from the false role she must pay. The rebellion, and she must decide how best to continue the fight in There Lilaĭiscovers that the prisoners of Elsewhere have their own role to play in She tries to take matters of revolution into her own hands, she isĬaught and sent to Elsewhere, a sadistic prison for traitors, criminals,Īnd anyone the upper castes consider useless or in the way. Kitty is on the side of the Blackcoats, and when Stop the rebellion Lily was orchestrating against him, and Lila'sįiance, Knox, who is secretly a member of the Blackcoats Rebellion to Transforming a person into another's likeness) as Lila, she hasīeen the pawn of both the prime minister, who masked her in order to Low-ranked member of society, but since she was masked (the process of Hart, daughter of Americas corrupt prime minister. Seventeen-year-old Kitty Doe has been living as the presumed-dead Lila In this sequel to Pawn (Harlequin Teen, 2013/VOYA December 2013), Captive: The Blackcoat Rebellion." Retrieved from Captive: The Blackcoat Rebellion." The Free Library.
