

I tore through this book in a few days because it was so fast paced. The pace of this book never let up, which I loved. I had a feeling that I would love it since it has been so raved about, but I didn’t know that I would love it this much. This is already my favorite book of 2020. Tierney longs for a life outside of the prescribed path of becoming a wife or being cast out to the outskirts or labor camps. It is known that they don’t all return alive, so the girls enter the woods fearful they may never return home or at the very least, will see and experience things beyond their worst imagination. It is said that they come into a sort of magic at this age and must use and get rid of it all before being allowed to return to the county. Once they find out, the veiled and unveiled girls are sent out to live in the woods for a full year in the Grace Year encampment. She is approaching her Veiling Day, when the 16-year-old girls find out who has been chosen to be married off. The Grace Year centers on the story of 16-year-old Tierney James living in Garner County. This one was right at the top of my list! But with everything going on right now, a lot of book release dates have been pushed back so my reading calendar has opened up to allow time for some backlist titles I’ve been dying to get to. I bought this one back in November of 2019 and have put it on my monthly TBR list every single month but had yet to read it until last week! Other books that were soon to be released were taking priority for me. I’ve seen a few different people describe the book as a cross between The Handmaid’s Tale and The Hunger Games which is the fastest way to get me to buy a book. A book that came out last year kept popping up as I was searching: The Grace Year by Kim Liggett. I totally sound like a broken record, but my favorite book of all time is The Handmaid’s Tale and I am always on the hunt for similar books.

I’ve always been drawn to dystopian/apocalyptic novels. One of my all-time favorite genres is dystopian fiction.
