ARC Book Review: The Commons (The Commons World #1) by Rebecca Ihim

Rating: ★★
Audience: YA Dystopian Romance
Length: 353 pages
Author: Rebecca Ihim
Publisher: DEEP Publishing
Release Date: April 28th, 2026
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

You must learn to think, act, and look like everyone else or face death.

Fitting in at school just went to a whole other level.

What do you do when all your thoughts are being measured to make sure you are a common copy of everyone? What do you do when you are graded on how common you are? Your future depends on your ability to conform.

Enrolled in a 22nd-century elite school where being common is celebrated, eighteen-year-old prodigy―Shantavia Lerogaski―is seen as a threat because she is too intelligent. When her sister goes missing, she must sacrifice everything, including her intelligence, to discover the shocking truth about The Commons and save her sister before it is too late.

Despite being valedictorian, Shantavia was supposed to take a gap year, living a peaceful life free from expectations. Now, her sister has gone missing from the elite college that controls the entire world―The Commons. Now, she must find a way to enroll.

Upon arrival at the highly technologized and guarded school, Shantavia begins a series of six inhumane, deathly tests in the six study zones of The Commons. If she does not complete these tests, she will be eliminated. But eliminated to where? She doesn’t know; in fact, no student does.

Things get even more complicated when Shantavia’s fate falls into the hands of the most formidable and powerful Patron, Pesh.

She is unsure if he is a friend or foe so she must fight her dangerous attraction to him—and question everyone, including her closest friends, or risk losing everything.

Can anyone be trusted in such a system? Can Shantavia even trust herself? Will she fall for Pesh? Will she fall for someone else even more ruthless? Will he be her ruin? Or will she find a way to expose The Commons and save everyone that’s dear to her?

Enemies, lovers, betrayals, suspense, and a dash of wit and steamy tension. Enter into the highly addictive and wildly imaginative world of The Commons, where the only way to survive is to be Common.

Thank you to the published for a gifted copy.

!!!!!!!

You may wonder why there’s exclamation points as my review starter this time, it’s because WHY WERE THERE SO MANY EXCLAMATION POINTS IN THIS BOOK. For heavens sakes even when a character said they were whispering it was with *!*. And things like “Runnnnn!!!!” alongside other variations throughout.

And the quote that sent me? “His tongue grabbed my neck.” I’m sorry, WHAT. There were multiple lines like this too?? The kiss scenes were incredibly cringy and honestly the love interest seemed to be a red flag.

I was legitimately intrigued at the beginning with the idea of The Commons. I’m kind of in a dystopian mood so I thought this would fit the bill. I WAS WRONG.

This ended up being a hate read (which I haven’t done in a hot minute). I’m just flabbergasted about many of the plot choices in this book.

Overall audience notes:

  • NA Dystopian Romance
  • Language: low
  • Romance: make-outs
  • Violence: moderate
  • Content warnings: brief mention of rape (a side character), assault, near death experiences

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Book Review: An Ocean Apart by Jill Tew

Rating: ★★★★
Audience: YA Dystopian Romance
Length: 352 pages
Author: Jill Tew
Publisher: Joy Revolution
Release Date: October 14th, 2025
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

An electrifying dystopian novel packed with a tantalizing love triangle, gripping political intrigue, and a Bachelor-style competition from the critically acclaimed author of The Dividing Sky, Jill Tew.

Eden Lowell has plenty to be frustrated about. In the flooded Marshes of former Miami, each day is about survival. Even her feelings for her best friend Henry are more complicated than they should be. Luckily, Eden knows exactly who to blame: the Cruisers, corporate elite who sail the world on massive ships instead of facing the environmental crimes they’ve committed on land.

When Eden learns that a Cruiser family is hosting a dating competition for their heir, Theo Desjardins, she seizes an opportunity. Aided by a political agitator known as the Ringmaster, she’ll infiltrate the competition, break Theo’s heart, and then steal his money for the Marshes. A perfect plan…

Until she gets to know Theo, who’s not only handsome but surprisingly kind…

As Eden drifts deeper down into the Cruisers’ world, the line separating truth and lies becomes murky. Torn between two identities, two loves, and two futures, will she choose the mission, or her heart?

PROGRESSIVELY GOOD.

The second half of this book showed off the best. I found myself much more invested and intrigued by waiting to see how things were going to play out. I’m not generally a fan of dystopian novels but Jill Tew has written another great one that holds my attention with a unique idea and characters you want to root for.

This feels love triangle adjacent and worked well because it’s clear from the get-go how that line was going to progress. I thought the romance was sweet and had a lot of those quiet moments where they genuinely got to know each other better. And I love seeing characters show growth as they learn new things about the world around them.

What I didn’t like was the competition. This one was just too catty for me and I didn’t click with it as well.

Overall though I liked it and the audiobook was a great production. I will continue to look forward to the next release from this author.

Overall audience notes:

  • YA Dystopian Romance
  • Language: low
  • Romance: kisses
  • Violence: low

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ARC Book Review: Soulmatch by Rebecca Danzenbaker

Rating: ★★★
Audience: YA Dystopian Romance
Length: 496 pages
Author: Rebecca Danzenbaker
Publisher: Simon Teen
Release Date: July 29th, 2025
Image & Other Reviews on: Goodreads

BOOK SUMMARY:

Two-hundred years after World War III, the world is at peace, all thanks to the soul-identification system. Every 18-year-old must report to the government to learn about their past lives, a terrifying process known as kirling. Good souls leave the institute with their inheritance, a career path, and if they’re lucky, a soulmate. Bad souls leave in handcuffs.

It’s a nerve-wracking ordeal for Sivon, who, given her uncanny ability to win every chess match, already suspects her soul isn’t normal. Turns out, she was right to worry. Sivon’s results stun not only her, but the entire world, making her the object of public scrutiny and anonymous threats.

Saddled with an infuriating and off-limits bodyguard, Sivon is thrust into a high-stakes game where souls are pawns and rules don’t exist. As deaths mount, Sivon must decipher friend from foe while protecting her heart against impossible odds. One wrong move could destroy the future lives of everyone Sivon loves, and she can’t let that happen, even if they’ll never love her back.

Thank you Simon Audio for the audiobook and Simon Teen for the ARC (gifted).

IT WAS OKAY?

I don’t know quite what to do with this one. I think if young adult dystopian is your jam then you should definitely try this. That’s a genre I’ve always been mixed on so this was leaned towards a miss for me. It wasn’t all bad, just missed a few marks.

There were many hallmark moments of the nostalgic dystopian favorites throughout. Competition and power checks and a romance woven in too. The audiobook was solid and I do recommend that format as well. I liked the growth for Sivon and how she started to learn who she was and stand up for herself as the plot kept mounting with intensity.

I wish I had felt more entranced by this book, but I think I would try another by this author.

Overall audience notes:

  • YA Dystopian Romance
  • Language: mild
  • Romance: kisses
  • Violence: moderate
  • Content warnings: death, loss of loved ones, su!icide, grief

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