Book Review: Shatter Me (Shatter Me Book 1) by Tahereh Mafi [Audiobook]

 
 
At 14, Juliette was taken from her parents and eventually left to rot in an asylum because her touch has the power to kill people. Years later, she's given the chance at a better life, in exchange for becoming a weapon of torture, and she'll have to decide if she's willing to pay that price or if she'd rather take her chances on the run with the only boy who's ever shown her kindness.

Book Cover - Shatter Me (Shatter Me Book 1) by Tahereh Mafi
Title: Shatter Me
Author:
Series:
Book Number: Book 1
Pages: 357
My Rating: 3 Stars
More Info: Goodreads // Amazon // Publisher
 

Review:

I feel like it’s impossible to talk about these books without discussing the whole series, so I’ve done quick thoughts for each individual books, plus a spoiler-free semi-series review with this review and a spoiler-filled discussion with my review of Book 3. I also did the same for Books 4-6.

Spoiler-Free Semi-Series Review of Books 1-3

If you haven’t read these yet, one important thing to know is that this series is one that you have to kind of commit to. There are a lot of things that seem a certain way in the first book, or that don’t entirely make sense, or that aren’t fully believable, but they end up being addressed or having explanations in later books.

I also felt that each book got a little bit better with more realism, nuance, and development among the characters and their emotions. For the first two, I kinda felt like maybe I was just too old for this series and have forgotten how it feels to be a teen because all the characters were just so DRAMATIC, and it drove me a little bit up the wall, even though it was probably realistic. (Side note: *SPOILER* I can only imagine how Castle must’ve felt having so many of his plans thrown into turmoil by the love lives of three overdramatic teenagers. *END SPOILER*) I also didn’t feel that invested in or connected to anyone at first; they kinda seemed like every other YA character with a tragic backstory that I’ve read about. But in the third book, the drama was somewhat reined in, what was there felt like it had more real emotion to it, and I really liked the characters, emotions, and relationships. Warner was intelligent and intense. Adam was passionate and temperamental. Juliette was fiery and strong-willed. Kenji was the comic relief but also the glue holding everyone together.

I will say though, the writing was very dramatic and over-the-top flowery. So dramatic that I could zone out for whole portions and not actually miss anything. But I recognize that that’s just a part of Juliette’s character and POV, and even that got slightly less dramatic, I think.

There were also some small discrepancies that I noticed throughout the series. Not full-blown plot holes, but things like Castle not having time to work one-on-one with Juliette, despite repeatedly saying how important her abilities were, but then having time to work one-on-one with *someone else* who’s abilities were, let’s be honest, far less useful.

Another thing I want to mention is that, even though the series does continue with three more books, I think you could stop after Book 3, as I believe was originally intended. The ending is abrupt, but it works well enough. Especially since Books 4-6 change everything so much that they almost feel like an entirely different series.

I’ve read the first three books twice, audiobook the second time. I enjoyed the narration by Kate Simses. She has a very young and soft-sounding voice (not in volume, but in way of speaking), though that might’ve been partially a choice for Juliette’s character. I would say her male voices were ok—not great, but not terrible. It became more noticeable in the third book that she wasn’t great at voice acting highly emotional dialogue (maybe it was just that she couldn’t do it when trying to do male voices), but she was good at changing her tone and inflection and way of speaking to suit the mood and emotion of the scene when doing narration. Normally I complain about dramatic narrators, but, in this case, her narration was perfect for the writing.

Overall, these books didn’t blow me away, but I enjoyed them and got more into them by the third book. They didn’t make me emotional in the way I thought they would from all the things I’d heard, and the dramatic writing/POV wasn’t quite to my taste, but they did have some great emotionally intense moments, some interesting characters, some touching relationships, and a great story.

Quick Thoughts on Book 1

Book 1 on its own didn’t impress me much. I didn’t feel much connection to the characters, nor did I feel like we got to know them well. Juliette and Adam both had some fire in them, though different temperaments, and Warner was an interesting villain, as mentally unhinged as he was. I actually kind of almost felt bad for him. The romance wasn’t entirely believable, but not entirely unbelievable either. The plot meandered with no clear goal. But again, it is a series that gets better over the next two books.

*I’ve read this book multiple times. This review was written after my 2nd read.*

*Rating: 3 Stars // 1st Read Date: 2016 // Format: Ebook*
*Rating: 3 Stars // 2nd Read Date: 2020 // Format: Audiobook*

 

Book Tags:

Basic Info

Book Author:
Publisher:
Series:
Genre: , ,
My Rating:
Series/Standalone:

More Info (Possible Spoilers)

Non-Human Type:
Relationships/Sex: ,
Extra Love:

 
 
 
 

Talk to me!

Have you read Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi?
Do you think it's realistic for teenage characters to be a bit dramatic?

 
 
[shared_counts]
 
 
 

Your Thoughts

 

10 thoughts on “Book Review: Shatter Me (Shatter Me Book 1) by Tahereh Mafi [Audiobook]

I'd love if you'd share your thoughts, too!

 

Leave a Reply to Suz Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

 
  1. Jessica

    I actually had read Shatter Me. I loved it. There is a reason I loved it. I had written a story very similar to the book series. In my story, the girl was named Josie and she couldn’t touch people because they would die if she did. I had a nightmare and made it into a story for a college writing class. Although the story had to be a ghost story so I had to adapt to that. Instead of being mad that the story was copied, I’m glad. She had written it much better than me. I would love to see the show/movie of it.

    1. Kristen

      Oddly enough, I also had an idea for a book series I wanted to write that was similar in a lot of way! Not the touching people, but the kind of characters in the main group and whatnot. I’m glad you ended up loving this one!

  2. Suz

    I’ve tried reading this book a couple of times and never really got into it. You’re right about the writing being over-the-top flowery. Maybe that’s why I abandoned it.

  3. Roberta R.

    You…read…a hyped series? 😮 LOL.

    I think YA has changed a lot since this one came out. Nowadays there are more books where teens aren’t necessarily being dramatic. (Mind you, I’m quoting your review, because I’ve never read this series). I’m not sure if teens are supposed to be like that…I don’t remember if i used to be dramatic, though i know I’ve always attached a lot of importance to certain things, so maybe?

    1. Kristen

      Sometimes I cave lol. Some of them do sound good! And occasionally they actually are, so then I’m tempted to try some more…

      Oh there are definitely books with less dramatic characters! I think it just depends on the book, how dramatic the teens are. I feel like I might’ve felt things dramatically as a teen (weird how we all forget so much, huh?), but I didn’t make big emotional scenes, which is basically what these characters did.

  4. Becky @ A Fool's Ingenuity

    I’ve tried this series a couple of times and I just don’t get it. Someone did say the audio was better so I have debated giving that a try but then I’m like I have so much else to read is it worth it? You have me tempted to give this series another chance with your review. We’ll see if I actually commit.

    1. Kristen

      I mean, I’m not gonna try and convince you to read it since it wasn’t super amazing for me, then it totally went off the rails for the final three books. But depending on what bothered you about it, it might get better if you keep reading, since like I said, a lot of the things that seemed weird ended up having explanations or being accounted for.