Pierce Brown’s Red Rising begins as what looks like a familiar story: revenge. In many ways, it reads like a science fiction reimagining of The Count of Monte Cristo. But where Edmond Dantès is betrayed by jealous rivals and corrupt officials, Darrow’s betrayal is civilizational. The injustice is not personal—it is systemic.
Seven hundred years before the novel opens, humanity colonized Luna and reorganized itself into a rigid hierarchy known as the Society. This system divides humanity into fourteen “Colors,” each engineered and conditioned for specific roles. At the top stand the Golds—physically larger, stronger, and trained from birth to rule. At the bottom are the Reds, expendable laborers told comforting lies about their place in the grand project of terraforming.
Darrow, a sixteen-year-old Red helium-3 miner on Mars, discovers that the world he has been taught to believe in is a fiction. After his wife Eo publicly protests the system and is executed, Darrow is drawn into the revolutionary Sons of Ares. What follows is not a frontal assault on power, but something more insidious: Darrow will infiltrate the ruling class itself.
Carving a New Man
The transformation that follows is one of the novel’s most striking sections. Darrow undergoes a brutal “carving” process, physically remade by a Violet into something approximating a Gold. He is then trained—physically, culturally, psychologically—to pass among the elite.
The parallels to Dantès in Monte Cristo are clear. Both protagonists are reshaped by suffering and education. Both emerge from transformation not merely restored, but weaponized. However, where Dantès acquires knowledge and patience, Darrow must acquire an entirely new biology.
This is also where my own scientific instincts begin to tug at the story. Brown explains that the Golds’ superiority stems from centuries of eugenics and forced Darwinism. While it makes for compelling myth-making, the degree of biological divergence sometimes strains plausibility. The physical differences between Colors are described as vast. At times, I found myself wondering whether they would even qualify as the same species by strict biological standards. It is one of those moments where an interest in science can slightly complicate the suspension of disbelief.
That said, the thematic intent is clear. This is a story about hierarchy and racism—with a twist. The ruling class is not merely socially dominant; they are biologically enhanced. Yet their moral authority is hollow. Their superiority of muscle and bone is matched by cruelty, manipulation, and systemic deception.
The Institute and the Logic of Empire
After surviving brutal entrance exams, Darrow is admitted to the Institute, where the Gold elite are forged. Here, Brown’s worldbuilding becomes particularly effective.
The Golds are not simply pampered aristocrats. They are subjected to ruthless internal competition. The Institute begins with the Passage: students are paired off and forced to fight to the death. The Society’s logic is clear—only the strong deserve to rule, and even among the strong, only the most ruthless survive.
From there, the surviving students are transported to the Valles Marineris. Each House is given a castle and instructed to conquer the others in a prolonged war game. Flags enslave opponents. Alliances shift. Leadership is tested under conditions of deprivation and violence.
It is here that the book shifts from revenge narrative to something more strategic. Darrow is no longer simply reacting. He must learn to lead, manipulate, inspire, and survive within the very system he intends to destroy.
Comparisons: The Traitor Baru Cormorant
It is difficult not to compare Red Rising with Seth Dickinson’s The Traitor Baru Cormorant. Both novels center on a protagonist who seeks to dismantle an empire from within. Both understand that brute rebellion often fails, and that true subversion requires mastery of the system’s rules.
However, their approaches differ significantly. Baru wages war through economics, bureaucracy, and institutional capture. Darrow wages war through charisma, violence, and myth-making. Baru’s battlefield is financial and ideological; Darrow’s is literal.
Where Dickinson’s work is coldly analytical, Brown’s is visceral. Red Rising trades in blood, honor, and spectacle. Yet both novels ask the same question: can you destroy an empire without becoming what it demands you be?
Final Thoughts
Up to the point where the Houses are unleashed upon one another in the Martian canyons, Red Rising establishes itself as more than a simple revenge tale. It is about transformation—biological, psychological, and political. It explores hierarchy not just as social construct, but as engineered reality.
Yes, parts of the science stretch credibility. Yes, the world can feel exaggerated. But the emotional momentum carries it forward. Brown understands scale, stakes, and the intoxicating pull of power.
If The Count of Monte Cristo is about a man patiently dismantling his enemies, Red Rising is about a young man thrown into the heart of empire and forced to decide whether he can break the system without being broken—or remade—by it.
And that tension is what makes the novel compelling.