Review Detail
Young Adult Fiction
220
Thrilling Finale!
Overall rating
4.3
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
A thrilling finale to a great series.
The story:
It picks up right after the events of the third book. Careen is a mess, suffering from PTSD after what she'd been through. But she has Tommy to bring her back. The resistance needs her. The country needs her. The OCSD is working furiously to activate the link that would put minor's under their control, allowing them to be tracked. It could destroy everything. But the resistance has a plan.
What I loved:
Once again, the characters that Ms. Lawson creates are vibrant and well-developed. I felt everything they felt. There's something so honest and endearing about Careen and Tommy in particular. Jumping into this book after reading book three months ago is like reuniting with old friends.
The OCSD is wonderfully evil - at least the people running it are. It makes for the perfect villain that every dystopian needs, creating a sense of urgency that keeps you flipping pages long after you should be asleep at night.
What was okay for me:
This one took a bit more time to get into than the others, but maybe only because it'd been a while since the previous book.
Final Verdict:
An exciting conclusion to a series that every dystopian fan should jump into without hesitation.
The story:
It picks up right after the events of the third book. Careen is a mess, suffering from PTSD after what she'd been through. But she has Tommy to bring her back. The resistance needs her. The country needs her. The OCSD is working furiously to activate the link that would put minor's under their control, allowing them to be tracked. It could destroy everything. But the resistance has a plan.
What I loved:
Once again, the characters that Ms. Lawson creates are vibrant and well-developed. I felt everything they felt. There's something so honest and endearing about Careen and Tommy in particular. Jumping into this book after reading book three months ago is like reuniting with old friends.
The OCSD is wonderfully evil - at least the people running it are. It makes for the perfect villain that every dystopian needs, creating a sense of urgency that keeps you flipping pages long after you should be asleep at night.
What was okay for me:
This one took a bit more time to get into than the others, but maybe only because it'd been a while since the previous book.
Final Verdict:
An exciting conclusion to a series that every dystopian fan should jump into without hesitation.
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