![]() ![]() The author doesn’t take up any themes such as societal freedom or individual liberty that might be provoked by the dystopian setting, focusing instead on entertainment value. Character development remains sketchy, although Genevieve’s relationship with her estranged but devoted husband could be interesting. ![]() When they reach San Francisco Bay, Genevieve suddenly decides to return to the City of Sand and complete the task of assassinating her father. The story then takes readers on an exciting trek to “Califia,” although Carey never explains how the group moves so quickly on foot across the forbidding landscape, focusing instead on the threats they experience during their stopovers. Now, after failing in her attempt to poison her father, she escapes from the City of Sand (formerly Las Vegas) with girls she rescues from the prisonlike schools her father has established with the intention of forcibly impregnating them to boost the population. Complicating matters, she’s in a loveless marriage to Charles but is pregnant by Caleb, the love of her life, who was killed in the previous book. To do so, she may have to murder her own father. ![]() The conclusion of the Eve trilogy begins with Genevieve trapped in the City of Sand.Īlthough her father has made himself the dictatorial king of The New America after a plague, Genevieve continues to side with the rebels determined to bring him down. ![]()
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