Review Detail
4.3 8
Young Adult Fiction
1004
Excellent Follow-Up to The Maze Runner!
Overall rating
4.3
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
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This was an excellent follow-up to The Maze Runner by James Dashner. The first book captivated me so much, I couldn't put it down and the second one did not disappoint. I read this book in the same way: barely able to put it down, thinking about it when I wasn't reading it, agonizing over it afterwards.
It's true, everything is different in this book and there is an entire new cast of characters to get to know, but James Dashner makes sure we get to know the important ones and the others, unfortunately, are cast aside. So it must be in times like this. Although the boys are not in the Glade any longer, they are in a new kind of hell, but it seems like they're actually in the real world now. That's what makes this book so interesting: after the Glade, do the boys really need to stick together now? Should they? It's a great experiment to see how they relate to one another now that they're out of the bubble, so to speak.
Another great think about The Scorch Trials is James Dashner's ability to bring on the creep. And by that, I mean everything is creepy from the beginning of the book until the end. I'm not sure if this is reality or if everyone is living in some kind of matrix. Although we're given more clues about the overall arc of the story, I'm still pretty clueless as to what's going on. Just like Thomas, I'm not sure who to trust and the people I thought I could trust, I've realized I can't. Or can I?
The Scorch Trials is a great YA thriller and I'm beyond excited to get my hands on The Death Cure, the last in the trilogy that comes out this fall. I can't wait!
It's true, everything is different in this book and there is an entire new cast of characters to get to know, but James Dashner makes sure we get to know the important ones and the others, unfortunately, are cast aside. So it must be in times like this. Although the boys are not in the Glade any longer, they are in a new kind of hell, but it seems like they're actually in the real world now. That's what makes this book so interesting: after the Glade, do the boys really need to stick together now? Should they? It's a great experiment to see how they relate to one another now that they're out of the bubble, so to speak.
Another great think about The Scorch Trials is James Dashner's ability to bring on the creep. And by that, I mean everything is creepy from the beginning of the book until the end. I'm not sure if this is reality or if everyone is living in some kind of matrix. Although we're given more clues about the overall arc of the story, I'm still pretty clueless as to what's going on. Just like Thomas, I'm not sure who to trust and the people I thought I could trust, I've realized I can't. Or can I?
The Scorch Trials is a great YA thriller and I'm beyond excited to get my hands on The Death Cure, the last in the trilogy that comes out this fall. I can't wait!
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