A review by jljaina
The Artful by Wilbert Stanton

2.0

An odd, yet unique blending of Oliver Twist and Robin Hood meets the movie Doomsday (which, in itself is a clash of other stories). While I know the Oliver Twist and the Robin Hood parts are intentional (and even referred to in the book), the Doomsday feel is just what it personally reminded me heavily of while reading this. Combine all this to a post-apocalyptic New York (just a short 11 years from when this book is written) and you get The Artful.


The story is shared from the aspect of Twist. He and Dodger have been together for the past several years, since the were children. The banded a group to together that stole 'meds' and supplies from the privileged few and shared them with those less fortunate. Apparently the wealthy spent their time partying, doing drugs or having sex. Otherwise they sat around bored, locked away in towers, safe from the sun. While everyone else became scavengers and tried to survive by whatever means they could figure out. Some stole, some became cannibals, thugs or religious nuts. We meet them all in this book.

The first half of the book was quite slow but it does finally pick up but by that point there were already several parts that I did not like. The main thing is the behavior of our lead characters and the constant sexual references. I seriously could not go even a few pages without something coming up! I realize they are teenagers but I want a story, not a sex diary and at times that is how this seemed. If you have seen American Pie or Scary Movie this can go right alongside those in that sense (less the comedy). It even comes across as a bit degrading at times. While part of that does get straightened out later, it vexed me a lot at first.

The other thing that drove me nuts were the constant cliches. And those never ended. they just kept on comin'! I lost track of the eye rolls I gave this book. Really wish parts were more original.

Yet the premise kept me intrigued enough to keep going. I had to understand what was going on. Why were things still so bad with the sun when people are obviously wandering the streets and no longer dropping like flies yet the rich are still in hiding? What is happening outside the quarantine zone. And how will our boys get out of the mess they find themselves in. While some questions are answered, the big one about what was so horrible about the sunlight is never really explained very well. The characters, especially Dodger, do grow on you after awhile but you really have to bear with it for the first 45% of the book before you can start to appreciate them. At least, that is how it was for me.


*I received a copy of this book via Netgalley in exchange for a fair, honest review. All thoughts and opinions expressed are strictly my own*