Snatched — The Chosen Trilogy Book 2 | Christian YA
About
Snatched, Book 2 of The Chosen Trilogy: Raya is taken to a hidden prison built to re-indoctrinate the faithful. Christian dystopian YA for Divergent fans.
Snatched is the second book in The Chosen Trilogy by Elisabeth Fowler, a coming-of-age Christian dystopian YA series. Sixteen-year-old Raya, trained in hand-to-hand combat, is captured by Syndicate soldiers and taken to the Transcendent Reculturing Program — a hidden prison built to legally re-indoctrinate minorities of faith. It explores grief, courage, and the cost of belief, and is recommended for fans of The Hunger Games and Divergent.
The fight didn't end at the bunker. It just went underground.
In a dystopian world where faith has become a battleground, 16-year-old Raya — skilled in hand-to-hand combat — takes a stand against secret government agents kidnapping minorities for a sinister brainwashing program. Captured by ruthless Syndicate soldiers, she finds herself face to face with a true nightmare: the TRP.
Upon arrival, she discovers that the Transcendent Reculturing Program is not a program at all, but one of many prisons hidden throughout the United States, built to legally re-indoctrinate mental slavery. Reeling from a significant loss, Raya finds little will to live — until she meets Mateo, who urges her to pull on her faith to survive the torments the Program has in store.
Knowing that no one is coming for them, Mateo and the others want to execute an escape plan with Raya's help. Can she find the strength within herself to overcome the Program, or will it be too much to bear?
Snatched is Book 2 of The Chosen Trilogy — a biblically-inspired, coming-of-age Christian dystopian YA series for fans of The Hunger Games, Divergent, and faith-based dystopian fiction. As raw as it is redemptive, it is a story about grief, defiance, and the cost of belief.
Praise for this book
“Snatched” is jam packed with suspenseful action and crafted to add faith based themes. Adversity fought with spiritual perseverance is always a great way to strengthen both the characters and invoke emotion and inspiration that lingers for the reader. This one has captured that concept perfectly. I love that it quotes scripture in an age where people prescribe to the fallacy that Christianity is something to keep private. Recommended for readers who love the age-old theme of Good vs evil, the kind that remind you to look above in times of trouble.