Review Detail
2.3 3
Middle Grade Fiction
254
A Wind in the Door audiobook review
Overall rating
2.0
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
Honestly, the main reason I listened to this is to see the previous story continued. That was definitely the wrong choice. The books in The Wrinkle in Time Quartet are actually companions and not a series in the least.
I found the story slightly interesting, but not half as much as A Wrinkle in Time. It felt a lot like the same story, just in a different form. The central theme was love and it was Meg, once again, who needed to learn the lesson. So many things were obvious and drawn out that it really got to be tedious.
Meg is still annoying. She doesn't seem to have grown at all since the last book. Except, Calvin is now her boyfriend (which seems so weird since she's about 13 or so and he's somewhere around 17.)
I can basically sum the book up like this: Meg loves everything and it makes everything turn out all right.
I found the story slightly interesting, but not half as much as A Wrinkle in Time. It felt a lot like the same story, just in a different form. The central theme was love and it was Meg, once again, who needed to learn the lesson. So many things were obvious and drawn out that it really got to be tedious.
Meg is still annoying. She doesn't seem to have grown at all since the last book. Except, Calvin is now her boyfriend (which seems so weird since she's about 13 or so and he's somewhere around 17.)
I can basically sum the book up like this: Meg loves everything and it makes everything turn out all right.
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