When Pierce Brown signed on for the three-book deal with Random House, he was 23, living above his former political science professor’s garage. Propelled by the ancient play Antigone and inspired by the sight of the planet Mars, Brown, a down-on-his-luck aspiring writer, wrote a novel that would change his life, Red Rising. The first of the main trilogy whose world includes a four-part follow-up saga, a number of comic books, and even a board game set in the same world, Red Rising is one of those novels that, despite being marketed as “YA”, find their stride in engaging the adult audience far beyond the last page.
All Darrow knows is the mines. Ever since humans came to Mars his people, the Reds, are a part of the dangerous, and often fatal, mining helium-3 which will help in preparing the world for habitation by the rest of humanity. It’s just them down below, watched over by the supervisory colors, sacrificing their short lives for the sake of a better future. While the Reds are a proud people, an undercurrent of discontent runs through small factions and rumors of their subjugation heighten around Darrow until he is forced to face the unthinkable. Mars is already inhabited. Generations of Reds have died long before their time in the hope of humanity’s prosperous future, when all along, the surface is thriving on the corpses of their ancestors. The young, fearless miner is enlisted by a resistance group to become the next step in their plan to overturn the corrupt rule of the Golds. And to do that, Darrow must become one himself.
“Man cannot be freed by the same injustice that enslaved it.”
Pierce Brown
In Red Rising, the reader explores a violent world and its caste system in which our protagonist must claw his way through the ranks to gain power and justice for his people. Though our hero, Darrow, goes through an incredible and harrowing Captain America-like transformation to become an elite “gold”, he still must do the internal and emotional work it takes to become the leader his people need him to be. While in an elite training institute which turns out to be a front for a deadly war simulator, Darrow meets and must gain the trust of his classmates and “fellow” Golds. Despite everything in him wanting to get revenge as quickly and ruthlessly as possible, he must grapple with his growing bonds between his classmates and their humanity amidst the bloodshed. Red Rising is great for older YA readers and Adult Book Club Groups, and has all the hallmarks of a great Dystopia novel. A close reading of the text is a good way to introduce themes like castes and class divide, gender equality in fantasy, societal instance on conformity, and the weight of responsibility into your group discussions.
If you’re interested in requesting Red Rising for your book club, you can find the Request Form here. There are 8 copies. (A librarian must request items)
Brown, Pierce. Red Rising. Del Rey. 2014.


