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This book is an old bag of sh*t and deserves nothing more than a dild0 in its a**hole! This book will cause you to bleed from your eye sockets due to long-boredom. You will, 100% guaranteed, lose interest in less than 5 pages into the book. Watch Thomas & Friends and live.
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{{Infobox book
| name = Divergent
| image = [[Image:Divergent (book) by Veronica Roth US Hardcover 2011.jpg|200px]]
| caption = Cover
| author = [[Veronica Roth]]
| series = The Divergent Trilogy
| publisher = Katherine Tegen Books/HarperCollins
| language= English
| genre= [[Science fiction]]/<br>[[Dystopian novel|Dystopian]]
| lob throws
| release_date = April 25, 2011
| media_type = Print ([[Hardcover]])/kindle
| pages= 487
| isbn = 0-06-202402-7
| followed_by = [[Insurgent (novel)|Insurgent]] (2012)
}}
'''''Divergent''''' is the debut novel of American author [[Veronica Roth]] and is the first installment in the Divergent trilogy. It is set within a dystopian version of Chicago. The novel has been compared to similar young adult books such as ''[[The Hunger Games]]'' and ''[[The Maze Runner]]'' because of its similar theme and target audience. Roth has said that the idea for the series was born while she was studying in college.

[[Summit Entertainment]] purchased the media rights to the book, and as of May 2013 is in the process of filming the movie, also titled ''[[Divergent (film)|Divergent]].''<ref>{{cite web|title=News|url=http://www.divergentlexicon.com/news/lionsgate-talks-divergent-movie|work=Divergent Lexicon|publisher=Divergent Lexicon|accessdate=7 June 2012|author=|date=31|month=May|year=2012}}</ref> The second novel in the trilogy, ''[[Insurgent (novel)|Insurgent]],'' was published on May 1, 2012, and the third and final book, ''[[Allegiant (novel)|Allegiant]],'' on October 22, 2013.

==Plot==

The future citizens of Chicago live in a society that is divided into five factions, each one meant to uphold a particular virtue of humanity: '''Abnegation,''' meant to uphold selflessness; '''Amity,''' meant for the peaceful; '''Candor,''' meant for the honest; '''Dauntless,''' meant for the brave; and '''Erudite,''' intended for the intelligent. On a given day each year, all sixteen-year-olds take an aptitude test that will tell them for which faction they are best suited. After receiving the results of their test, they must decide whether to remain with their family or transfer to a new faction.

Sixteen-year-old Beatrice Prior was born into an Abnegation family, but selflessness has never come naturally to her like it does her brother, Caleb. She feels lonely and constricted by her environment and feels like she does not belong. When the time comes for Beatrice to take her aptitude test, the results are inconclusive: instead of fitting neatly into any one faction, she shows equal aptitude for three: Abnegation, Erudite, and Dauntless. This makes her "Divergent" and she is warned never to share this information with anyone for fear of her life. Even for a Divergent, it is very rare to have results with three factions. On her way home from the aptitude test, she encounters a factionless man who grabs her hand and frightens her. This makes her feel very nervous because she does not want to end up like him and is wary about risking her normal lifestyle and failing. She does not want to upset her father, who is certain that she will remain in Abnegation even though she is skeptical.

On Choosing Day, much to her and her parents's surprise, Beatrice makes the decision to leave Abnegation and join Dauntless, while her brother Caleb chooses Erudite. She immediately leaves to join her new faction and her new home. Beatrice, who renames herself Tris when she reaches the Dauntless compound, becomes good friends with fellow transfer initiates Christina, Al, and Will. Another transfer initiate, Peter, quickly sets out to antagonize her as he does not believe Tris is good enough to be in Dauntless. Peter also has two friends, Andrew and Molly, who back him up as he tortures Tris. She is also introduced to their instructor, Four, who explains that they must pass an initiation process before they are accepted as full-fledged Dauntless members. They must rank in the top ten at the end of initiation, or else they will be dismissed and become factionless.

Initiation is broken into three stages. The first involves learning how to handle guns and knives as well as engaging in hand-to-hand combat. Despite being physically weaker than most of her fellow initiates, Tris finishes the stage in sixth place. Peter is jealous and intimidated by the first-place finisher, Edward, and retaliates by stabbing Edward in the eye with a butter knife. Tris is ranked just after Molly, which can be attributed to the time when Tris came into the dormitory with only a towel and Peter pulled it off, exposing and tormenting her. Tris hopes that she can fight Peter, but instead she fights Molly, one of Peter's cronies, quickly trouncing her. Although Molly nearly beats her to death, Tris continues to fight because of her anger towards her tormentors.

Meanwhile, the Erudite stirs up dissent among the factions by releasing antagonizing reports about the Abnegation leaders, who run the city government. Peter and his cronies, Molly and Drew, give Tris a hard time because she came from Abnegation. The Erudite's reports called Abnegation's leader, Marcus, abusive because they thought he was abusing his son, Tobias. Tobias was known as a "traitor" to Abnegation because he transferred from Abnegation to Dauntless. The reports also say that Tris's and Caleb's mother and father raised them the wrong way because they both switched factions, the Abnegation wasted the city's food by giving it to the factionless, and quoted Molly saying that Tris talks in her sleep, telling her father to stop. Tris begins to befriend the Dauntless-born initiates, including Uriah, Lynn, and Marlene.

Stage two puts the initiates into simulations, much like during the aptitude tests, in which they will encounter various fears--or scenarios symbolic of their fears--and are tested by how quickly they are able to calm down. Because Tris is Divergent, she is able to recognize that she is under a simulation while others do not, and she can even manipulate the system. She is again warned never to allow anyone to know that she is Divergent, because those who are found to be Divergent end up being killed by faction leaders. At the end of the stage, Tris ranks first among the initiates. That evening, out of jealousy and resentment, Peter, Drew, and Al attack Tris and try to throw her into the chasm at Dauntless headquarters. However, Four steps in and rescues her. Al begs Tris's forgiveness, but she rebuffs him, leading him to commit suicide by jumping into the chasm.

The initiates prepare for the final stage of their initiation, the fear landscape--a gathering of all of their fears in a single simulation. In the fear landscape, all of them, Divergent or not, will be aware that they are under a simulation and must use the skills they learned in the previous stages to break out of each fear. They will be scored according to how many fears they have and the amount of time it takes them to get through the simulation. Tris's relationship with Four continues to grow and he lets her into his own fear landscape. Tris learns that Four only has four fears in his landscape, a record, hence his nickname. She also learns his real name, Tobias, and that his father is Marcus, the very Abnegation leader who has been accused of having physically abused him during his childhood. Four later shares with Tris information he has discovered about the Erudite's plans to use the Dauntless to stage an attack on the Abnegation.

Tris goes into her fear landscape for her final initiation test, in which she encounters a total of seven fears: getting eaten alive by crows, drowning while trapped in a glass tank, drowning in the ocean, being burned at the stake by Peter, being kidnapped by assailants, having sex with Tobias thinking that he only wants her because of her body, and being forced to shoot her own family. After her test, Tris, along with all other Dauntless members, is injected with a new serum that supposedly tracks people in case they ever go missing. The final rankings are posted, and Tris is ranked first. In the midst of celebrating, Tris suddenly realizes that the serum is how the Erudite will force the Dauntless to carry out the attack.

The plan is carried out that night; the serum induces a simulation and all of the Dauntless become sleeper soldiers, hypnotized into marching on an attack of Abnegation. However, the serum does not work on Tris or Tobias (Four) because they are both Divergent. They try to escape but are quickly caught and brought before Jeanine, the Erudite leader, who injects Four with a new serum that affects the Divergent. She sentences Tris to death, while Four is sent back to the control room to oversee the attack. Tris is locked inside the glass tank of her fear landscape, but her mother, a former Dauntless who is revealed also to be Divergent, saves her. As they escape, Tris's mother is shot and killed, and Tris is subsequently forced to shoot Will, who attacks her while he is under the influence of the simulation. She finds her father, Caleb, and Marcus, and the group heads back to Dauntless to stop the simulation. Though her father is also killed along the way, Tris finds the control room and encounters Tobias, under the influence of a simulation that causes him to attack her. Tris cannot overpower Tobias, but she refuses to kill him and surrenders. This breaks through Four's simulation, and the two are able to shut down the Erudite simulation and free the remaining Dauntless from their mind control. They join Caleb and Marcus, as well as Peter, who had helped Tris find the control room in exchange for his safety. The group then boards a train to the Amity sector to find the rest of the Abnegation survivors, leading to the events ''[[Insurgent_(novel)|Insurgent]]'' describes.

==Major themes==
''The New York Times'' stated that ''Divergent'' "explores a more common adolescent anxiety--the painful realization that coming into one's own sometimes means leaving family behind, both ideologically and physically."<ref name="Dominus">{{cite news|last=Dominus|first=Susan|title=Choose Wisely|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/15/books/review/young-adult-books-divergent-by-veronica-roth.html?_r=0|accessdate=14 May 2013|newspaper=New York Times|date=15 May 2011}}</ref> ''The Voice of Youth Advocates'' agrees, writing that ''Divergent'' shows the pressure of "having to choose between following in your parents' footsteps or doing something new."<ref name="Voice of Youth Advocates">{{cite news|last=Burrit|first=Devin|title=Roth, Veronica. Divergent|url=http://nypl-teens-2013.bibliocommons.com/item/print_item/11589231062_divergent|accessdate=16 May 2013|newspaper=Voice of Youth Advocates|date=August 2011}}</ref>

==Style==

''Divergent'' is described as having a fast pace by many reviewers. Nolan, from the ''American Prospect,'' noted that ''Divergent'' follows patterns that are present in both ''The Hunger Games'' and ''Blood Red Road.''<ref name="Nolan">{{cite news|last=Nolan|first=Abby|title=The American Prospect|url=http://prospect.org/article/hells-belles|accessdate=16 May 2013|newspaper=The American Prospect|date=March 2012}}</ref>

==Reception==

''Divergent'' has been well received. In a review from the ''New York Times,'' Susan Dominus wrote that it was "rich in plot and imaginative details," but also that, compared to other such books in the same genre as the ''[[The Hunger Games|Hunger Games]]'' trilogy, it did "not exactly distinguish itself."<ref>{{cite web|last=Dominus|first=Susan|title=In This Dystopia, Teens Must Choose Wisely|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/15/books/review/young-adult-books-divergent-by-veronica-roth.html?_r=0|publisher=New York Times|accessdate=28 December 2012}}</ref> In a review for ''Entertainment Weekly,'' Breia Brissey said that it was "flimsier and less nuanced" than ''The Hunger Games'' but was good, giving it a B+ rating.<ref>{{cite web|last=Brissey|first=Breia|title=Divergent|url=http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20609141_20484977,00.html|publisher=Entertainment Weekly|accessdate=28 December 2012}}</ref> ''Kirkus Reviews'' said it was "built with careful details and intriguing scope."<ref>{{cite web|title=Divergent|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/veronica-roth/divergent/#review|publisher=Kirkus Reviews|accessdate=28 December 2012}}</ref> Common Sense Media commented on the book's "deep messages about identity and controlling societies" and on the "unstoppable plot that's remarkably original." It was rated 5 out of 5 stars and given an age 13+ rating.<ref>{{cite web|last=Angulo Chen|first=Sandie|title=Divergent|url=http://www.commonsensemedia.org/book-reviews/divergent?gclid=CKel5fz_vbQCFdKd4AodiRMAVw|publisher=Common Sense Media|accessdate=28 December 2012}}</ref>

The book debuted at #6 on the New York Times Children's Chapter Books Best Seller list on May 22, 2011,<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/2011-05-22/chapter-books/list.html Best Sellers - The New York Times<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and remained on the list for 11 weeks.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/2011-07-31/chapter-books/list.html Best Sellers - The New York Times<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> It also spent 39 weeks on the Times's Children's Paperback Books Best Seller list in 2012,<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/2012-12-09/paperback-books/list.html Best Sellers - The New York Times<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> reaching number one.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/2012-08-26/paperback-books/list.html Best Sellers - The New York Times<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The Times changed its Children's Best Seller lists in December, 2012,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mediabistro.com/galleycat/nyt-creates-separate-middle-grade-ya-bestsellers-lists_b62043 |title=NYT Creates Separate Middle Grade & YA Bestsellers Lists |work=[[GalleyCat]] |date=December 6, 2012 |first=Maryann |last=Yin |accessdate=June 28, 2013}}</ref> eliminating the Children's Paperback list, and Divergent continued its run on the new Young Adult Best Seller list.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/2012-12-16/young-adult/list.html Best Sellers - The New York Times<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> It is still on the list as of February, 2013.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/2013-01-27/young-adult/list.html Best Sellers - The New York Times<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
To date, book sales are now over 5 million copies for both novels combined, and both titles are HarperCollins most successful e-books ever in regards to sales.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gotham-news.com/index.php?q=news/2013/03/15/downton-abbey-star-theo-james-joins-shailene-woodley-in-young-adult-adaptation-diver |title=DOWNTON ABBEY Star Theo James Joins Shailene Woodley in Young Adult Adaptation DIVERGENT |work=Gotham News |date=March 15, 2013 |first=Pietro |last=Filipponi |accessdate=June 28, 2013}}</ref>

==Awards and nominations==

''Divergent'' won Favorite book of 2011 in 2011's Goodreads Choice Awards.<ref name="Goodreads">{{cite web|title="Divergent," 1Q84" and "The Geeks Shell Inherit the Earth" Among Winners of 2011|url=http://www.goodreads.com/award/choice/2011|publisher=Goodreads.com|accessdate=16 May 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Goodreads Choice Awards Announced; Divergent Voted Favorite Book of 2011|url=hhttp://reviews.libraryjournal.com/2011/12/in-the-bookroom/goodreads-choice-awards-announced-divergent-named-favorite-book-of-2011/|accessdate=3 September 2013}}</ref> Also, ''Divergent'' was number one in the Teens' Top Ten Vote, sponsored by YALSA.<ref name="Teens' Top Ten">{{cite news|title=Divergent leads list of teens' Top Ten|accessdate=14 May 2013|url=http://www.ala.org/news/press-releases/2012/10/teens-choose-divergent-their-favorite-book-yalsa%E2%80%99s-teens%E2%80%99-top-ten|newspaper=American Library Association Magazine}}</ref> It also won the Sakura Medal Contest.

==Film adaptation==

{{Main|Divergent (film)}}

[[Summit Entertainment]] bought the rights to film an adaptation of the novel and recruited [[Neil Burger]] to direct, with [[Shailene Woodley]] starring as Beatrice "Tris" Prior. [[Lionsgate]] and its subsidiary [[Summit Entertainment]] were slated to distribute the film. The role of Tobias "Four" Eaton eventually went to [[Theo James]] after an extensive search that included competition from Alex Pettyfer, Alexander Ludwig, Lucas Till, Jeremy Irvine, Luke Bracey, Brenton Thwaites and Jack Reynor.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/downton-abbeys-theo-james-nabs-428998 |title='Downton Abbey's' Theo James Nabs Male Lead in Summit's 'Divergent' |work=[[The Hollywood Reporter]] |date=March 15, 2013 |first1=Tatiana |last1=Siegel |first2=Borys |last2=Kit |accessdate=June 28, 2013}}</ref> Lionsgate-Summit’s feature adaptation of the dystopian teen tale, with a screenplay adapted by [[Evan Daugherty]] from Roth's novels, had gone into production by late November of 2013 and was scheduled for a release date of March 21, 2014. The company also obtained rights to Roth’s sequel, ''[[Insurgent (novel)|Insurgent]].'' [[Kate Winslet]] was signed as Jeanine Matthews. Also recruited into the cast were [[Maggie Q]] as Tori, [[Zoe Kravitz]] as Christina, [[Ansel Elgort]] as Caleb, [[Miles Teller]] as Peter, [[Ashley Judd]] as Natalie Prior, [[Tony Goldwyn]] as Andrew Prior, and [[Jai Courtney]] as Eric.<ref>{{Cite news |first1=Borys |last1=Kit |first2=Tatiana |last2=Siegel |date=March 11, 2013 |title=Maggie Q, Zoe Kravitz and Ansel Elgort Join 'Divergent' (Exclusive) |magazine=[[The Hollywood Reporter]] |url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/maggie-q-zoe-kravitz-ansel-427375 |accessdate=March 11, 2013 }}</ref>

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==Further reading==
* [http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/summit-signs-scribe-divergent-adaptation-196341 "Summit Signs Scribe for 'Divergent' Adaptation (Exclusive)."] [http://www.hollywoodreporter.com The Hollywood Reporter]. Accessed October 2011.
* [http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703730804576312242857387526.html "The Scary Future, the Embarrassing Past."] [http://online.wsj.com/home-page ''The Wall Street Journal'']. Accessed October 2011.
* [http://www.ballinaadvocate.com.au/story/2011/07/14/book-review-divergent/ "Book review: Divergent."] [http://www.ballinaadvocate.com.au ''Ballina Shire Advocate'']. Accessed October 2011.

==External links==
{{Wikiquote|Divergent}}
* Spisak, April. "Divergent (review)". Project MUSE Journals Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, Volume 64, Number 9, May 2011.
*[http://openbooksociety.com/article/vernoica-roth-divergent-obs-book-review/ Divergent by Veronica Roth (book #1) review]
*[http://books.google.com/books?id=nv9lZM_0RI4C&printsec=frontcover&dq=divergent+by+veronica+roth&hl=en&sa=X&ei=zj2mUfzZKJTw8ATF2oGgCA&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAA ''Divergent'' on Google Books]
*[http://veronicarothbooks.blogspot.com/ Veronica Roth's official website]

{{Divergent (series)}}

[[Category:2011 novels]]
[[Category:American young adult novels]]
[[Category:Dystopian novels]]
[[Category:Debut novels]]
[[Category:Novels set in Chicago, Illinois]]
[[Category:Divergent trilogy]]

Revision as of 16:03, 6 December 2013

This book is an old bag of sh*t and deserves nothing more than a dild0 in its a**hole! This book will cause you to bleed from your eye sockets due to long-boredom. You will, 100% guaranteed, lose interest in less than 5 pages into the book. Watch Thomas & Friends and live.