The Choosing (Blog Tour)
The Choosing
Rachelle Dekker
Tyndale
Like all citizens since the Ruining, Carrington Hale knows the importance of this day. But she never expected the moment she’d spent a lifetime preparing for—her Choosing ceremony—would end in disaster. Ripped from her family, she’ll spend her days serving as a Lint, the lowest level of society. She knows it’s her duty to follow the true way of the Authority.
But as Carrington begins this nightmare, rumors of rebellion rattle her beliefs. The whispers contradict everything she’s been told; yet they resonate deep within.
Then Carrington is offered an unprecedented chance at the life she’s always dreamed of, but she can’t shake the feeling that it may be an illusion. With a killer targeting Lints and corruption threatening the highest levels of the Authority, Carrington must uncover the truth before it destroys her.
But as Carrington begins this nightmare, rumors of rebellion rattle her beliefs. The whispers contradict everything she’s been told; yet they resonate deep within.
Then Carrington is offered an unprecedented chance at the life she’s always dreamed of, but she can’t shake the feeling that it may be an illusion. With a killer targeting Lints and corruption threatening the highest levels of the Authority, Carrington must uncover the truth before it destroys her.
I admit when I first heard the premise for this book I was a little worried. "The Choosing?" Oh no. Was this going to be some Divergent-ish YA that's been done a million times?
However, I needn't have worried. Two seconds after I opened the book I went..."Oh. That kind of choosing. Okay, this is different." While this book definitely has its similarities to other Dystopian novels, I can honestly say that the plot was unlike those I'd read before.
That being said, I did find the book somewhat frustrating as a reader (often in the same ways I found Lauren Oliver's Delirium, which, by the way, I didn't finish). The cult-like society that twisted the Words of God into something for their own benefit never failed to make me seethe, and sometimes Carrington frustrated me because I felt like she just didn't get it.
However, the book wrapped up better than I had hoped, was filled with several plot elements I wasn't expecting, and overall I'm looking forward to the next book in this series.
Rating: 8
I received this book for free from the publisher in exchange for my honest review.
About the Author
Author Q&A
1. How did you come up with the story for The Choosing?
This is a hard question because it has many answers. I wanted to write a
theme-based novel about identity. I wanted to write a dystopian novel. I
wanted to write in a world that was familiar, but in a setting where I could
change the way the world worked. It actually is several ideas I’d been toying
with pulled into one story. Once I landed on Carrington’s core revelation and
story arc, I simply fell in love with her as a character and drew the rest of the
story around her. That’s usually how it works for me. I come up with a
character, good or bad, and create the story from there.
2. You based your main character, Carrington, off of your younger
sister. In what ways is Carrington like her?
It’s more the beliefs that Carrington struggles with that remind me of my sister. The idea of
worth, of not feeling like you’re enough, or questioning whether anyone would choose you.
Carrington came about as I spent time with my sister and her college-age friends and saw
that a large majority of them were searching for significance, searching for worth—none
more than my sister at the time.
3. Throughout the book, Carrington struggles with understanding her identity and
worth and what is true. Why did you decide to write about the theme of identity?
Someone once asked me, If you could leave one message for your younger sisters, what
would it be? The answer was always the same: I would pray they knew what they were
worth. Identity is everything. There isn’t a theme that doesn’t start with identity, or circle
back to identity. Knowing who you truly are is the greatest journey we face. Am I enough;
am I worth it? I believe everyone faces these questions, and I sought out to explore them
through this story.
4. Do you think women tend to struggle with identity more than men?
I don’t think women struggle with identity more then men. Not at all. I just think we struggle
differently. As a woman I understand the identity struggle from a female perspective more,
but I think most men wonder if they’re enough just as much as women do. We are all the
same at our core, really. We are on this earth for a short time, trying to figure out our
purpose and worth. Searching for recognition, usually in all the wrong places. The truth I am
discovering is that there is no need for searching. The truth already resides inside of us. The
Father has already marked us as chosen, worth it; He has already given us a purpose. It’s
only a matter of looking inward to the soul and to the Creator of that soul to find our worth.
5. One of the story’s most significant lines is, “Life is a journey of remembering and
forgetting.” What do you mean by this?
It means exactly what you probably think. We have these flashes of clarity where we see so
clearly who we are—and our connection to the Father—but then, in a single moment,
something pulls our attention away and we forget who we are. This is the journey of life,
remembering and forgetting. But I believe the more we remember, the more we set our gaze
on the Father, the less often we forget.
6. What do you hope readers will take away from the story?
I hope readers are filled with joy and power as they either realize for the first time who
their Father is and what they are really worth, or as they simply remember this truth.
7. Did you discover anything about your own identity through the writing process?
I will steal a line from Ted Dekker on this one: “I write to discover.” They are one and the
same. Even when I think there’s nothing left to discover, if I let myself be open to discovery,
it almost always comes. So yes, I did. And I told my husband, if nothing ever comes of this
book, it would still have been worth writing because of the way it impacted my life.
8. What would you say to the person who is struggling, trying to find their identity in
temporary, unsatisfying places?
I would say we have all been there, and that those places will only serve as a prison in the
end. They may seem like happiness now, but eventually they will become suffering. But
that’s just part of the journey of identity. Some people need to learn the hard way—I did for
sure! I searched for significance in darkness and somehow the Father still led me to the
light. So when I see people going through what I did, I empathize, but also know that in a
single moment they can discover their true identity.
9. The Choosing is the first of a three-book series. What can we expect in the next two
books?
More struggles with identity, but in different ways. Familiar characters dealing with fear
and worry and forgiveness. We’ll walk with our characters as they continue to understand
the true way of Aaron’s Father. More excitement, more romance (of course), and more self discovery.
10. What is it like being Ted Dekker’s daughter? Did your father help you with the
writing process?
Being Ted’s daughter is wonderful! He’s the best, but then I hope many daughters feel that
way about their fathers. He is a bit of a mystery, though. Sometimes, even sitting at the
dinner table, I can tell he’s lost in thought, and I wonder what it might be like to have his
mind.
It’s been a blessing to watch him write and struggle with writing, so that now when I
struggle I have an understanding ear to talk off. He is always willing to talk me through the
emotional and mental side of writing (which is where the biggest battles lie in wait) but as
far as story, for the most part he lets me fend for myself. It’s always been important to me to
write through my challenges on my own. To figure out scenes alone. In fact, he didn’t even
read The Choosing until I was already in conversations with Tyndale about publication. I
think that’s because he wanted me to believe I could do it on my own.
But when I doubt my ability as a writer, and when I forget who I am, he is the one I call. And
he reminds me that life is a journey of remembering and forgetting, and helps me in
remembering once again.
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