![]() 3/11), introduced a dystopian America in which love, \”amor deliria nervosa,\” is a deadly disease to be eradicated. The first book in the trilogy, Delirium (rev. Readers who gravitate toward dystopian literature with high-stakes action and flawed humans who are willing to risk all for their ideals will enjoy this novel and eagerly await the next one in the trilogy.–\”Jane Henriksen Baird, Anchorage Public Library, AK\” Copyright 2012 Reed Business Information. The underlying theme that love will win out regardless of prohibition is a powerful idea that will speak to teens. The characters are fully realized and heartbreakingly human. ![]() ![]() Oliver’s descriptions of life in the unregulated Wilds with its deprivations and dangers are powerful and vivid. They discover they have more in common than they could have imagined despite their initial mutual antipathy and distrust. She begins to have feelings for Julian, the son of the leader of the DFA, when they are incarcerated together following a mass demonstration. It shifts back and forth between \”then,\” as readers discover how Lena adapts to her life in the Wilds even as she grieves for Alex, and \”now\” where she is infiltrating the DFA, an organization committed to offering the \”cure\” to all citizens regardless of their age in spite of the known risks to anyone under the age of 18. Gr 9 Up–Following directly on the heels of \”Delirium\” (HarperCollins, 2011), \”Pandemonium\” is equally riveting. ![]()
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