Review: Material Girls by Elaine Dimopoulos

Material Girls by Elaine Dimopoulos

Genres: Young Adult, Dystopian

In Marla Klein and Ivy Wilde’s world, teens are the
gatekeepers of culture. A top fashion label employs
sixteen-year-old Marla to dictate hot new clothing trends, while Ivy, a teen pop star, popularizes the garments that Marla approves. Both girls are pawns in a calculated but seductive system of corporate control, and both begin to question their world’s aggressive levels of consumption. Will their new “eco-chic” trend subversively resist and overturn the industry that controls every part of their lives?

Smart, provocative, and entertaining, this thrilling page-turner for teens questions the cult like mentality of fame and fashion. Are you in or are you out?
   Whenever I imagine dystopians, I think more District 12 than Capitol. I've come to expect grit and destruction. But Material Girls gave me the opposite. It's a scary inflation of the world we live in today. There's a huge emphasis on consumerism and celebrity. I think that makes Material Girls scarier than a doom and gloom dystopian. It had a chord of reality that hit close to home.

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  Material Girls is told from two point of views, and I loved it. Both voices, Marla and Ivy, were very distinct and offered a deep insight into the world of Material Girls. Marla was easily my favorite, but that's not much of a surprise. She faces some very hard circumstances in this book, and I loved the way she handled them. She stayed true to herself. I liked Ivy well enough, but I felt a lot of pity for her. I felt like she was in over her head, but I respected her little efforts to send a big f- you to the system! Life is constantly speeding by and can leave either of them behind in its wake without warning. Talk about edge of your seat reading!

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  The fashion houses that rule in Material Girls made me so angry. I hated the way that they treated people as disposable. It left me feeling so unsettled. Elaine Dimopoulos paints a sweeping picture of the pitfalls of consumerism and forces the reader to think about the moral implications without being heavy handed.

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Material Girls is a fast paced read that I could not step away from. It kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time! The world that the author creates is as much a cautionary tale about the woes of consumerism as it is entertaining. Fashion lovers and readers alike will find a thrilling story in the pages of Material Girls!

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**I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review with no compensation.

3 comments:

  1. I'm so glad you liked it! I've been reading rather mixed reviews on this book but I really hoped that it wouldn't be ALL bad! It does sound really interesting... I'll have to read it sometime! Great review!

    Laura @BlueEyeBooks

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  2. I'd never ever ever heard of this book until I saw your post! It sounds really interesting, and dystopian fiction is my favorite genre, besides I've read a lot of awful dystopians lately, so I guess if I don't like it it's not a great loss!

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  3. This sounds like something I would really like. Knowing that it hit so close to home as well makes me interested because usually dystopian books don't do that for me. I also think I would like the characters here as well.

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