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Pandemonium (Delirium #2)
Age Range
14+
Release Date
February 28, 2012
ISBN
978-0061978067
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I’m pushing aside the memory of my nightmare,
pushing aside thoughts of Alex,
pushing aside thoughts of Hana and my old school,
push,
push,
push,
like Raven taught me to do.
The old life is dead.
But the old Lena is dead too.
I buried her.
I left her beyond a fence,
behind a wall of smoke and flame.

Lauren Oliver delivers an electrifying follow-up to her acclaimed New York Times bestseller, Delirium. This riveting, brilliant novel crackles with the fire of fierce defiance, forbidden romance, and the sparks of a revolution about to ignite.

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Average editor rating from: 2 user(s)

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5.0
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5.0  (2)
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5.0  (2)
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5.0  (2)

 
Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-03-24 03:23:58 Megan Kelly
Overall rating 
 
5.0
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
5.0
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5.0
Megan Kelly Reviewed by Megan Kelly    March 23, 2012
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Lena, Warrior Princess

PANDEMONIUM is the perfect name for Lauren Oliver's second entry into the Delirium series. While the first book had protagonist Lena slowly awakening to the fact that love should not be illegal, this novel has her paying dearly for having loved. Lena spends PANDEMONIUM in a constant state of flight, unsure of who she can trust.

PANDEMONIUM is another opportunity for Oliver to demonstrate her writing, which somehow manages to be both flowing and gripping. Confusing, I know, but it is a compliment. The tone of this novel is so different from DELIRIUM. Lena is angry and strong, the Resistance movement is just as corrupt as the society they are protesting, and the action never lets up. There are many plot twists, all of which I predicted, but none of which I would have changed.

As much as I love warrior Lena and her adventures in the Wilds, my favorite scene involved her flashing back to a happy day with her best friend Hana. Oliver writes, "It seems impossibly, unbelievably long ago--when I could sit in a room with carpet, when we could spend days messing around, doing nothing in each other's company. I didn't realize then what a privilege that was: to be bored with your best friend; to have time to waste." This quote resonates deeply with me, as someone who has close friends all over the world and who doesn't always get to spend time with the people I love. It's a good reminder for me to take advantage of the time I have now with my friends and family.

The third book in the series, REQUIEM, comes out in February 2013. I can't believe I have to wait a year to find out what will happen next with Lena. Still, I am willing to be patient because I know beautiful writing can't be rushed.

Good Points
Lena's tough now, and it's a good thing!
Lauren Oliver is such a talented writer, it's almost like two books in one.
Do You Recommend?
Yes
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-01-24 21:39:11 Jen
Overall rating 
 
5.0
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
5.0
Writing Style 
 
5.0
Jen Reviewed by Jen    January 24, 2012
Last updated: January 24, 2012
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Is there a Delirium Trilogy support group? If not let's start one. I'll provide the cupcakes.

This sequel does not disappoint. Lauren Oliver continues to provide the action, thrills, suspense and romance that will have you on the edge of your seat right up to the last word! The.last.word. *clutches chest*

The story picks up where Delirium left off and alternates between "Now" and "Then". "Then" covers Lena's time in the Wilds and "Now" is the present which finds Lena working for the resistance and posing as regular citizen. In the Wilds is where her grief is the weightiest and most palpable. She not only grieves for Alex but for Hana and her old life, her old self. She knows she can no longer be the girl she once was or even the girl she'd hoped to be living free as an Invalid with Alex. She struggles to find a new sense of self with Raven, Tack and the others. While out one day with Raven, a girl whose not much older than Lena but who commands respect based on her own years spent in the Wilds, Lena describes it like this:

"Grief is like sinking, like being buried. I am in water the tawny color of kicked-up dirt. Every breath is full of choking. There is nothing to hold on to, no sides, no way to claw myself up." ~ Lena

She wants desperately to hold onto hope that Alex might be alive but she knows she's being foolish. She saw him standing there riddled with bullets and covered in blood as the police and regulators swarmed him. She knows they don't deal kindly with those caught trying to escape into the Wilds. She also knows she needs to let go of him.

When the story flips back to "Now", Lena is put in the position of keeping a watchful eye on Julian Fineman, son of Thomas Fineman, the man at the center of the DFA ("Deliria-Free America") movement. Julian is a regular at his father's DFA rallies, often speaking in support of his dad and his handsome face adorns posters all over the area. The task seems easy enough except Julian stands for everything Lena hates. When there's an attack by Savages and both he and Lena are held captive, she finds there's more to Julian than his public persona. He's not only easy on the eyes but he too has a painful past and he's harboring secrets, just like Lena.

If they want to survive, Lena and Julian will have to trust each other which won't be easy but fighting off the feelings that are growing between them will prove much harder. Once again, Lena will have to decide if the risk of love is worth taking as her feelings for Julian begin to blur with her memories of Alex. (There may or may not be kissing involved in said "survival plan".)

Lena also starts to notice that many in the resistance are allowing bitterness and anger to fuel their fight and the lines between purpose and vengeance are no longer clear directives. "Sometimes it is necessary that individuals are sacrificed for the health of the whole." has become the attitude of some she trusts and sends her reeling because it's the same stance the DFA takes. What's going on?! Are they on the same side now?!

She and Julian have been through the ringer, risking their lives, narrowly escaping death (several times I might add) and for what?! When Julian is threatened with execution, Lena has flashbacks to what happened to Alex and refuses to go through another experience like that. "Not again, not again, not again." She's in a race against the clock, only this time, instead of escaping over the fence into the Wilds, she must sneak back into the city.

When all is said and done and Lena thinks she might be able to take a breath, (the reader too) the world beneath her feet seems to crumble and spiral out of control, leaving her gasping for air. (and the reader begging for book 3!) *CLUTCHES CHEST*

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Overall rating 
 
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-05-17 20:33:27 Asher Knight
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Asher Knight Reviewed by Asher Knight    May 17, 2012
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You may have already noticed, but it bears repeating: I couldn't rate this book.

A forewarning: No amount of reviews will equate to proper preparation for the sheer emotion, as bloody and gaping as any severe wound, and as equally striking, living in Pandemonium. The beauty of this sequel is so horribly, tortuously perfect, as sweetly poignant as letting go of someone important, or watching a younger sibling standing up on his or her own two feet, no longer needing a guiding hand, or leaving behind family to catch one's dreams. Necessary, exhilarating, and painful. Pandemonium is a never-ending punch to the gut, a beating we continue to beg for because it's the only way to keep the story alive and close, to peel away what bars us from the heartwrenching truth. The tears are relief from the intensity, soothing the grief coiled tight inside. And then joy slips in as well, surfacing in fresh love and purpose for our wonderful heroine, but sorrow is never too far behind in tribute to the tragedy that brought us all here, a deadly, flourishing seedling that began in Delirium's end.

We remember being sick and angry, hurt swelling in staggering, destructive tsunamis at our core for the shattering final moments of Delirium, so we are rightfully wary of what flavors we'll taste in this next chapter of Lena's life. Will we find sweetness, bitterness, sourness, saltiness or a combination of the lot? Will we be able to bear savoring the journey that brought Lena to the present and the one that helped her escape the past without fighting the urge to toss Pandemonium across the room? Reasonable questions that instigate the darkest thoughts of our minds, projecting images of the horrors that could potentially unfold, though we attempt to ignore the warnings.

Alternating between chapters of then and now, we are privy to Lena's rebirth, like watching a snake shedding its old skin, the new skin vulnerable at first, then toughening over time. Even after all her loss and hurt, however, Lena never drifts away, the person she is refusing to flee and leave behind an empty, impenetrable shell incapable of anything light and beautiful. Instead she takes her pain, her anger, her needs and morphs them into the driving force that brings her to where she is today. Pushing away her old life, burying the blockage of dark memories, and shifting into a stronger girl, Lena now embodies what it means to survive—the hard voyage and the end result. The plot never suffers for all the switching to and fro Pandemonium does; it serves as the perfect frustration, wonderful, trying, and inescapable. The story veers and flies and trips, catching on a heartwrenching moment at just the right time, pinwheeling into an emotional freefall and sucking us down with it as it drops.

Questions, questions, questions, beating, beating, in our heads, on our hearts, breathing all over every turn of the story. And the romance: revival, a new breath, a desirous need, happiness after wallowing in the forever black of our—ours and Lena's—shared sorrow. We fall in love anew, unable to compare two stories, two souls, two Lenas because they're both so lovely, delivering different feelings, tearing us in jagged bewildered halves. Bleeding, always bleeding, for Lena, for extra characters essential to her life, for the ones in her past that have no place in the now. For devastating choices, heart-numbing deaths, the emotionless herd of civilians that can't care, zombies that don't eat flesh but the love of their children, the untouched youth, the dying and deformed, the incurables.

Lauren's words, so fragile and flowing in a hardened world, with heartless people, are throbbing feelings that seep in and find room in our stuffed, close-to-brimming hearts. The importance of this fight for love, for choices and freedom, so profound in the stories of each new person we 'meet,' in relationships just formed. Hearts battered, souls weary, expressions seemingly immune to shock now, hope lifted, we stumble into the ending and shock once again takes us, punches us, pushes us to our knees, because the unthinkable drains us of thought, breath, and heartbeats.

Once, Lauren Oliver damaged us in Delirium, not quite destroying, but with those final sentences in Pandemonium, she masterfully wields a dagger of distress and impact, targets what's left of us, and becomes the perfect murderer.

Originally posted at Paranormal Indulgence, 3/6/12

Good Points
I tried, in vain, to think of which one suited best, but they all seemed inadequate. God, how do I even... I'm still IN SHOCK, so consuming and crushing that I don't know what to do with myself. I'd heard countless times that this book is so different from where Oliver first hooked us in Delirium, but I didn't believe the impact would be so astounding. New Lena, tears, death, life, joy, Julian, Alex, and A CLIFFHANGER ENDING THAT IS UNFATHOMABLE. I feel like a sob is going to break out of me at any moment. Requiem, the third book, is like a distant dream, one where my hope is—perhaps foolishly—staked.
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-05-10 15:50:01 K. Lea Hudson
Overall rating 
 
5.0
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
5.0
Writing Style 
 
5.0
K. Lea Hudson Reviewed by K. Lea Hudson    May 10, 2012
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A Great Sequel

Phew. Lauren Oliver really had her work cut out for her in this follow-up to, Delirium. Not only do we see Lana's character grow immensely and really come into her own, but we also see the introduction of an almost entirely new cast of characters.

There are so many things that I would love to go into about Alex, Julian, and Lana's mom...but that would be giving away just too many potential spoilers; and it would totally ruin the experience for anyone about to read the book.

The book is written in Lana's present reality, but it also flashes back to scenes from her past. Take your time reading this book as it follows Lana from "Now" (as a member of the Resistance in NY) to "Then" (as she rediscovers who she really is in the Wilds). Lauren Oliver packed a lot of punch in this book and, at times, you can almost feel the emotion rolling off of the pages like a thick fog. You will feel the weight pressed against your chest at times during this book because poor Lana is put to so many tests, both emotionally and physically.

Let me just say that by the end of the book I was (literally) sitting on the edge of my bed, wide-eyed, and by the last words, I was cursing out loud (and, I will admit I wanted to smack Lauren Oliver - sorry Lauren, I love you!, but that was my first reaction) because the book was over and I cannot believe that Lauren Oliver expects us to sit and wait until February, 2013 for Requiem to come out so we can find out what happens next!!!!!

Good Points
Very rarely do we see a sequel that is better than the first book, this book is one of those precious gems.
Do You Recommend?
Yes
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-05-01 21:21:09 Lauren T
Overall rating 
 
4.7
Plot 
 
4.0
Characters 
 
5.0
Writing Style 
 
5.0
Lauren T Reviewed by Lauren T    May 01, 2012
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Exciting, fast-paced, enjoyable read

Pandemonium was an enjoyable, exciting, fast-paced book. I did find it a bit predictable - I wasn't nearly as surprised as Lena at the twists and turns of the plot - but that didn't lessen my enjoyment of it at all. And as much as I loved Alex in Delirium and I wasn't sure initially if I would be able to accept if Lena moved on, I found that I loved Julian just as much as Alex. I appreciated how the evolution of Lena and Julian's relationship mirrored that of Lena and Alex - but with Lena's role reversed.

Ultimately, I thought Pandemonium was a great set-up for the third book in the trilogy. I anticipate the conclusion to the Delirium Trilogy will contain lots of action, a likely love triangle (which is overdone in YA books, but in a world where the entire plot focuses around the benefits and drawbacks of falling in love, it probably can't be avoided), and Lena's deeper involvement with the resistance. It answered some questions set up in Delirium while asking several more. And it introduced us to some great new characters.

My frustrations with the book were minor. I missed the characters from Delirium (but I suspect some of them will pop up in the 3rd book). I couldn't understand how just a couple days lost in the woods resulted in Lena needing weeks to recuperate, considering how physically fit she was at the end of Delirium. And several of Lena's great plans just seemed far too simple (especially in the couple parts where she has to deal with key codes).

But overall, none of that was enough to take away from my enjoyment of the book. The storytelling was excellent, and I found myself completely immersed in the characters and world that Ms. Oliver created. I'm intrigued and excited to see how she wraps up Lena's story in book 3. Highly recommend!

Do You Recommend?
Yes
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-04-28 00:24:16 Molly Lewis
Overall rating 
 
4.3
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
4.0
Writing Style 
 
4.0
Molly Lewis Reviewed by Molly Lewis    April 27, 2012
Last updated: April 27, 2012
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You will beg for book three.

Lauren Oliver's Pandemonium follows hard on the heels of its prequel, Delirium. For those who haven't read the first book, read no further. In fact, do yourself a favor and wait to read the first till the whole series is done. Because you will not be satisfied with Pandemonium's conclusion. It requires more, and still more. The end of the book is so quaking with the need for more, in fact, that it's hard to write about the rest of it without mentioning the book's final moments. But we will try.

Lena has escaped over the fence of her home in Portland, Maine. She meant to escape with Alex, the one who first taught her about the Wilds outside of the only world she knows. The one who first showed her that even if love is a disease, the deliria is worth it. But he was wounded, left behind to the fire, the guns, to death. And so she has shut her heart off from her old life and any memories that might linger. After days of running, she is found half dead by Raven, an Invalid who has been leading a group of uncureds in the Wilds, moving from homestead to homestead just to survive.

Lena becomes one of them whether she wants to or not, and hardens, growing more and more like Raven and the other fierce survivors on the far side of the wall. They join the Resistance, and Lena finds herself faced with the daunting task of living among the cureds, pretending to be one of them, following the dictates of the Resistance without question. It is not the life she was looking for when she crossed to the other side, but it is the only one left to her. She crossed for love, but love has been lost.

Maybe.

The first third of this book is slow. Painfully slow, though that may have been my general exhaustion toward dystopia in general and series in particular. Then all of a sudden, just over a third of the way through, everything gets kicked up a notch and you're on the edge of your seat with curiosity and tension and a foreboding that tells you precisely what's going on even though you really, really don't want it to be true. This isn't remarkably descriptive, but let's just say there are explosions and sickness and fire and hidden codes and aliases and kidnapping and torture and secrets whispered in the dark. Lena hardens and then unhardens and then hardens again, and you feel for her the whole way through.

That doesn't change the fact that when I closed this book I made a half-hearted vow never to begin a series again before the entire thing has been released. It had only been a few months since I read Delirium, but I had still forgotten much. Most importantly, I'd forgotten the love I had for the characters, and that's something very hard to revive en media res. The slowness of the first part was probably due in large measure to the fact that I had forgotten to care. It is my fault, of course, but it certainly didn't help Lena much.

Do You Recommend?
Yes
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-04-09 03:39:42 Maddie Fraser
Overall rating 
 
5.0
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
5.0
Writing Style 
 
5.0
Maddie Fraser Reviewed by Maddie Fraser    April 08, 2012
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Missing Alex

With the NEW Lena comes new adventure. This books turned me on my head and tugged at my heart. Literally making my heart race during times I thought she was going to meet her mother. I cried when people were lost and I laughed during the few happy times that surfaced during the time of Pandemonium.
I grew close to many of the new characters and have downloaded the new eBook of Hana. I miss her as a BFF too. Lauren Oliver has brought out so many different emotions in me throughout Delirium and Pandemonium, that is rarely done.
I will be on the edge of my seat waiting the third installment.

Good Points
The two points of time was great at filling in the gaps while telling the new story where the real drama kicks in. The new characters pick up where the old characters leave off, keeping everyone flowing.
Bad Points
I really missed Alex, just as Lena did. Bravo to Lauren Oliver for making me feel that way. I'm okay with Julian but there is nothing like a first love.
Do You Recommend?
Yes
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-04-08 23:51:58 Carolina
Overall rating 
 
5.0
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
5.0
Writing Style 
 
5.0
Carolina Reviewed by Carolina    April 08, 2012
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Better than the first

I can't wait for the third installment!

Good Points
This is one of my favorite dystopian books. I thought it was really interesting and creative the format of the book. The chapters alternated between events that happened "Now" and "Then". "Then" was the time right after Adam's death and her escape, and "Now" was the new version of herself and the new life she created. While it may have been slightly confusing in the beginning, I thought that after just two or three chapters, I had gotten into the pattern and seriously enjoyed it.

The character development and the new Lena were so much better than "Delirium". I feel like she was a lot stronger and independent in the book, which made me like her so much more. The side characters were also very likable, with more dimension than meets the eye.

The description of the novel sounded very depressing and heart-rending, but then when I started reading it, I realized that it was more empowering than anything else. I felt proud for Lena, and I just loved everything she was doing. I agreed with most of her actions and thoughts, and I thought that the way she thought about and missed Alex was just the ideal amount. I wasn't annoyed that maybe she wasn't worrying about him enough, or that she was thinking about him TOO much. It was just the perfect degree. There was the best combination of action, suspense and romance that was extremely thrilling.

The plot was fantastic, unbelievably exciting, and unlike the first novel, there was actually a main conflict and twisting, unexpected roads. I had anticipated the ending, the sort of conclusion I hoped for and wished extremely hard that it occurred - AND IT DID!

Bad Points
I cannot conjure up any sort of criticism for the book. I absolutely would recommend it to everyone. The first book wasn't nearly as good as this one, and I would coerce someone to read "Delirium" just so they can read this one, understand it, and fully enjoy it.
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Yes
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-04-08 10:37:22 Casog
Overall rating 
 
5.0
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
5.0
Writing Style 
 
5.0
Casog Reviewed by Casog    April 08, 2012
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Push, push, push.

On the brink of death, crawling through the dirt on her hands and knees, Lena has lost everything. Alex was dead, she saw them kill him, the red blooming over his shirt. Just as she is about to die, Raven, an Invalid, saves her. They nurse her back to health and teach her the ways of the Wild.She pushes the thought of Alex and the rest of her past life away, push, push, push. The old Lena is dead, the new Lena has just been born.

Pandemonium is written in two different times, then and now. Then as in the days just after Alex's death. Now as what she is now and her new self. The way this book is written is quite interesting as while she is living her life in New York she flashes back to the past where she was being reborn in to what she is now.

This book is way more exciting yet it feels lonely without Alex and Julian can't fill all of this space. This book is full of hardships, resisting, forgetting the past and living in the now. The past is dead, there is only now and the future.

Do You Recommend?
Yes
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-03-25 18:17:55 Margot
Overall rating 
 
5.0
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
5.0
Writing Style 
 
5.0
Margot Reviewed by Margot    March 25, 2012
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Pandemonium left me craving for more!

Oh. My. God! This book is awesome!
1. The characters developed a lot. There were new characters, and old ones disappeared... Sometimes I missed them, it seemed like I wasn't reading Delirium #2 but Pandemonium #1... Still, the new characters were as good as the 'old' characters.
2. The story was great. It was told in Now-Then style. I had to get used to that, because you were reading 2 stories at once, but once I got used to it, it was easy to read, and it kept the stories interesting.
3. The writing style is great. In all of Oliver's books you can see that her writing style is great. It's easy to read, but it doesn't make you feel like you're reading a MG book. There weren't lots of mistakes and editing errors it in, which was super because they always keep on annoying me...
4. The ending is torture! I need to read Requiem NOW! This is the worst type of cliffhanger, the time I have to wait is so long. I might need to invent a time machine...
5. the cover is gorgeous! It represents the book very well. But I can't really explain it, because that'd be too spoilery
6. page was superb! It wasn't too quick so I did not have to re-read parts of the book, but it wasn't too slow either.


It's not easy to find a book you love as much as this one! A page-turner filled with romance, action, friendship and lots of problems.

I will stop reviewing this book right now, because I just can't really tell you about it without spoiling... *sigh*
Go read this book now. It's worth your time!!

Do You Recommend?
Yes
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Pandemonium (Delirium #2) 2012-01-25 05:18:38 Jessica Manning
Overall rating 
 
5.0
Plot 
 
5.0
Characters 
 
5.0
Writing Style 
 
5.0
Jessica Manning Reviewed by Jessica Manning    January 25, 2012
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Pandemonium is a must read for 2012!

I loved how different this book was from the first book in the series, Delirium! It was completely unexpected and completely opposite of the first book!

Lena is in the Wilds all by herself. Alex is gone and Lena has no idea what happened to him. Well, she may have an idea but she doesn't want to think about it. She is hurt and struggling in the cruel outside world until Raven finds her and takes her to the Homestead. There Lena gets well and meets other Invalids. There, Lena becomes part of the resistance.

Lena is much harder in this book. She is angry too. Angry at her mom, angry at Alex, angry at the Regulators. This makes her a much more interesting character. I really connected with her in this book instead of the weak and wimpy Lena of the last book.

Lena is told she must watch Julian Fineman, the son of the DFA leader, Thomas Fineman. Julian hasn't had the cure yet due to an illness but is going to do it at the upcoming rally. Lena is told to watch him during the rally no matter what and she does. However, this leads to her kidnapping.

Throughout the book we are with Lena and Julian as they are first held hostage by the Scavengers, then escape and flee through the tunnels and finally towards the end where I won't say anything else to avoid spoilers. Through the book, their relationship grows and while Lena doesn't forget Alex, she comes to have feelings for Julian.

I thought Pandemonium had a lot more action that Delirium. It was more on edge and suspensful. I read the last 200 pages in one day because I simply couldn't put it down. I loved the relationship between Lena and Raven and Lena and Julian. Their characters were all well-developed and I could connect to each one of them.

The book takes you back and forth from the present to "then" when Lena is with Raven and the group. "Then" consists of their time at the first homestead and then their trek to the next homestead. It leaves a lot left unanswered though like how do Lena, Raven and Tack get back into New York and infiltrate the Regulator's world. However, I am hoping maybe that the third (and last) book will go into this a little more. This is my only very small complaint!

The ending leaves you screaming for more! I won't divulge what happens but as soon as Book 3 is out, I am reading it to find out how Lena is going to get herself out of this mess!

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0.0 (0)
Twice Upon a Time #3: Beauty and the Beast, the Only One Who Didn't Run Away
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0.0
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0.0 (0)
Unbreak My Heart
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4.7 (2)
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4.3 (1)
Of Poseidon
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3.7 (2)
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3.7 (2)
Breaking Lauren
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4.7
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0.0 (0)
Dark Kiss (Nightwatchers #1)
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1.7
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1.7 (1)
Bad Girls Don't Die: As Dead As It Gets
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4.7
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0.0 (0)
Guy Langman, Crime Scene Procrastinator
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4.0
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0.0 (0)
Cheesie Mack is Cool in a Duel
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0.0
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0.0 (0)
The Story of the Olympics in Ancient and Early Modern Times
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0.0
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0.0 (0)
Rush for the Gold: Mystery at the Olympics
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4.0
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0.0 (0)
Tokyo Heist
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0.0
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0.0 (0)
Nothing Special
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3.3
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0.0 (0)
Stickman Odyssey, Book 2: The Wrath of Zozimos
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3.0
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0.0 (0)
Dogs of the Drowned City #3: The Return
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3.0
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0.0 (0)
The Sisters Grimm: Book Nine: The Council of Mirrors
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3.0
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0.0 (0)
Sir Seth Thistlethwaite Seeks the Truth of Betty the Yeti (#3)
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2.5
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0.0 (0)
Max Finder Mystery Collected Casebook 6
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3.0
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0.0 (0)
Riley Mack and Other Known Troublemakers
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3.0
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0.0 (0)
The Last Apprentice: Grimalkin the Witch Assassin (Book 9)
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4.3
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0.0 (0)
Beswitched
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3.0
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0.0 (0)
Weaving Magic
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0.0
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YABC is, first and foremost, a place for people who love books. Founded in 1998 by (now author) Kimberly Pauley as a basic stopover for people looking for information on young adult books, YABC has since evolved into one of the largest sites targeted towards tween and teen readers. You can find book reviews by readers and staff reviewers, author interviews & bios, chapter excerpts, exciting giveaways, and much more on both children's and YA books. The site is constantly evolving and being added to, so stop by frequently. If you ever have any questions, just e-mail MG Buehrlen at any time.
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