2025 Reading Challenge discussion

This topic is about
Between Shades of Gray
ARCHIVE 2014
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Between Shades of Gray: Reviews by 2014 Reading Challengers
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The story certainly made me grateful for the life that I live.
Thank you for picking it as the December group read.



Between Shades of Gray is the story of Lina, a fifteen year old suddenly ripped from her life in Lithuania, the only life she's ever known, and taken on a terrifying journey to a work camp with her mother and brother. She doesn't know why they're being taken or where her father is.
The story here is amazing and one that needs to be told. I know embarrassingly little about the penal labor camps in Siberia operated by imperial Russia. I don't remember learning about them at ALL in school, but history was never my best subject, so that could've been more my own fault than anything else.
I learned a TON from this book, and this book has inspired me to learn more and find new resources to learn about what happened here.
As far a novel, though, this fell flat for me. I had a tough time empathizing with our narrator Lina because she doesn't show much emotion--maybe she's in shock. The flashbacks were really annoying and probably not the best device to set the stage for the novel.
It reads VERY much like a young adult book.


The penal system in the Imperial Russia is a completely different matter. I don't really see why it should be studied in schools, at least in most countries. It wasn't really "lethal" like Stalin's Gulag, more like a normal part of the justice system at the time.
I'm really happy this book was chosen for the December read, I would not have picked it up on my own, but am extremely glad to have had the opportunity to read it!