![]() I also know that a lot of you didn't really like the fact that Lena is "allegedly" going to fall in love with someone other than Alex, and I'm sorry to tell you guys, but that fact is true. So I definitely think of her as part of the "kick-ass heroine" club now. I definitely saw more of Lena in action scenes (and winning) in this book than in the previous. ![]() She even is deemed strong enough by her fellow rebels to be part of the resistance. Now without all those regulations and boundaries, Lena was able to unleash her inner survivalist, which wasn't a very easy thing to do, after all that she's been through. But in Pandemonium, I feel that she definitely redeemed herself. I know that in Delirium, a number of people didn't find Lena that "kick-ass" heroine that we all love (in her defense, all those rules would scare me too, into rebelling). In Pandemonium, Lena is having to survive in the Wilds with her new friends, is having to prove herself worthy to be in the resistance, and is having to forget the boy who made her rebel in the first place, infected her, Alex. But I really should've known better than to doubt Lauren Oliver. There had just been too many shitty sequels that could make me enthusiastic about reading them. Where is the next one when I need it the most?īefore reading Pandemonium, I really doubted that this book could follow up to Delirium and its (tragic) ending. EVER.īut then a bit later on, it hits me how hilarious the situation Lena's gotten herself in and the laughter starts.īut what a hell of a book. That had to be the most awkward "awkward moment" I've ever read in a book. You can visit her online at Also posted on my blog, YA Anonymous. She has written one novel for adults, Rooms.Ī graduate of the University of Chicago and NYU's MFA program, Lauren Oliver divides her time between New York, Connecticut, and a variety of airport lounges. Her novels for middle grade readers include The Spindlers, Liesl & Po, and the Curiosity House series, co-written with H. The sequel to Replica, titled Ringer, is her most recent novel and was released October 3rd, 2017. The film rights to both Replica and Lauren's bestselling first novel, Before I Fall, were acquired by AwesomenessTV Before I Fall is now a major motion picture and opened in theaters March of 2017. She is also the New York Times bestselling author of the YA novels Replica, Vanishing Girls, Panic, and the Delirium trilogy: Delirium, Pandemonium, and Requiem, which have been translated into more than thirty languages. Why? It would be great if there's a part on a deranged government leader who was hurt really badly in love or something that would shed light to why love is so bad.Lauren Oliver is the cofounder of media and content development company Glasstown Entertainment, where she serves as the president of production. The plot seems exciting but I don't see the reason behind the whole love is a disease thing. Lauren Oliver is a talented writer with a lyrical, beautiful style of writing but the story development is simply too draggy. more to pandemonium and possibly requiem too. Review 2: I felt so bad when I had to skim through delirium and now I've got to do the same. I have heard the final book has an open ending, glad I'm prepared for that before I jump in. Otherwise, Lauren Oliver writes an incredibly thrilling and action packed story with interesting characters. I wonder if it played off better in the paper book than it did in audio format? It's a shame that in a series where the characters are fighting for the right to experience love (in a dystopian future where love is a sickness that is forcibly "cured" at age 18) the romances are the weakest elements of the series. Review 1: I'm knocking a star off of the second book's review because one element of the storyline was just so terrible it was distracting from an otherwise excellent story.
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