![]() Tension, excitement and action were flooded into every page. I read this book in a mere day - I just couldn’t put it down. Words can’t suffice how much better Pandemonium was compared to its predecessor Delirium. I think this is for any age group and anyone who appreciates their freedom of speech and thought, which ultimately this is about. This is such a brilliant book, and as an older person I was surprised how much I enjoyed it. Both story lines are as exciting: following Lena desperately fighting to survive with her fellow resistors as they travel from northern New York state to the south to find warmer climes for the winter and in the alternate timeline where Lena is kidnapped a long with a antideliria advocate and it is their relationship that fascinates here. In the next chapter we are taken back to the moment Lena crossed the border fence and where she had presumed her boyfriend Alex had died. The novel opens with Lena living in New York attending a school there, however it is soon explained that she is part of an undercover group of uncured people who are now forming a resistance. The lead character Lena has really grown, we see her morphing from being a fairly confused girl into a young woman with a purpose, and someone who knows what she believes in. I guess that's the key here, this is a real thriller as well as being YA fantasy/romance novel. I liked Delirium, I loved this.Īgain I don't usually like books which use the alternating chapters of now and then, but here it really worked and I literally galloped through the story as both time lines were equally thrilling. ![]() ![]() As a sequel it is unusual to surpass a first in a series novel, but for me this did. ![]()
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