The Taking by Kimberly Derting

The Taking (Taking Trilogy, #1)

by Kimberly Derting

The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer meets The Fifth Wave in this chilling and explosive new series from author Kimberly Derting. The last thing Kyra Agnew remembers is a flash of bright light. She awakes to discover that five whole years have passed. Everyone in her life has moved on-her parents are divorced, her boyfriend is in college and dating her best friend-but Kyra's still the sixteen-year-old she was when she vanished. She finds herself drawn to Tyler, her boyfriend's kid brother, despite her best efforts to ignore this growing attraction. In order to find out the truth, the two of them decide to retrace her steps from that fateful night. They discover that there are others who have been "taken," just like Kyra. But Kyra is the first person to have been returned past the forty-eight-hour taken mark. With a determined secret government agency after her, Kyra desperately tries to find an explanation and reclaim the life she once had ...but what if the life she wants back is not her own?

Reviewed by Amber on

1 of 5 stars

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This review was originally posted on Books of Amber

The Taking makes me sad, you guys, and not in a good way. I’m a huge fan of the first three books in Derting’s Body Finder series (not so much the fourth) and I also really enjoyed The Pledge, so I was looking forward to The Taking. I initially thought that it was about fairies but I was so very wrong. I know, I don’t know how I come to these conclusions either.


Anyway, The Taking disappointed me in many ways. Firstly, the bloody romance was appalling. It started off so well, with the main character whose name I can’t remember Kyra returning home to find everything had changed, and mistaking the love interest for her (ex)boyfriend. I was all for it, because I like complicated relationships and this one had the opportunity to really impress me, but it soon turned into insta-love and oh my god, it was terrible.

The other relationships in this book were also poorly developed, and I found myself rolling my eyes at everyone because they were ridiculous. Kyra’s relationship with her mother and new family is cliché, since she is on the outs with all of them and her mother is painted as the bad guy. There is absolutely no resolution or development on that front. Kyra’s father has always been one of her greatest supporters, but when Kyra returns from being Taken their relationship is strained because her dad has turned into a conspiracy theorist. Then there’s the ex-boyfriend, with whom Kyra has one tiny conversation with and suddenly she doesn’t love him any more (after being best friends with him and, later, involved romantically involved with him for years) and the ex-best friend who, again, is given a tiny scene in which nothing really gets said.

Instead of focussing on those already established relationships, Derting decided to focus almost solely on Kyra and Tyler and their new found “love”. They were together romantically for a handful of days before deciding they should get married (not really) and make all the babies (again, not true) and I felt like I was reading Twilight all over again. It should go without saying that family > insta-love, and Derting really disappointed me on that front.

The plot outside of the love story was all right. I was interested in the abduction stuff and the fireflies and the government agency that was after Kyra, but it all felt pretty standard. The mystery surrounding Kyra’s disappearance was interesting, though, especially when I thought it had something to do with fairies. The fairy thing made total sense to me for most of the book, but it turns out I was completely off the mark there. Oops. I blame the front cover.

I don’t recommend The Taking. At all. But I will probably look up to see what happens in the sequel because I am kind of interested in that aspect. I just don’t want to take the time to actually read it. It makes me really sad, because Derting’s early works were excellent, but the newer two books I have read have been very mediocre, and even less than.

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  • Started reading
  • 11 August, 2014: Finished reading
  • 11 August, 2014: Reviewed