Ratings111
Average rating3.9
My least favorite of the trilogy, FAR too much time is spent just describing people just running around with a real lack of actual plot.
Voilà, dit is waarom ik deze reeks ben beginnen lezen: om te weten hoe de tv-serie zal aflopen.
En dat weet ik dus, bij deze.
Met het materiaal zou het mogelijk geweest zijn om er een eindeloos verhaal van te maken, boeken aan een stuk “zullen ze of zullen ze niet” doen, en Lost-gewijs telkens meer en andere mensen in het centrum van de gebeurtenissen zetten, maar neen dus.
Blake Crouch heeft duidelijk lessen getrokken uit Lost (en andere, kuchUnder the Domekuch) en zorgt ervoor dat de status quo zeer snel gebroken worden, en dat het allemaal ontploft.
Er zit genoeg materiaal in de boeken om nog een tweede volledig seizoen van tien afleveringen te maken, als ze het niet te veel uitmelken. Er zitten spectaculaire dingen in, de conflicten tussen de verschillende hoofdpersonages worden proper (zei het véél te snel om realistisch te zijn) afgewerkt, en er wordt zowaar een niet al te belachelijk einde aan gebrouwen.
Het enige: er is bijzonder veel suspension of disbelief nodig om het centrale gevaar van de reeks serieus te nemen. Het leest allemaal min of meer haalbaar, maar als een mens er een beetje over nadenkt, is het bijzonder zeer weinig plausibel. Zoals in: de man heeft maar van zeer zeer ver de klepel horen hangen over basisbiologie en evolutie.
Maar goed. Content dat ik het gelezen heb.
2.5 stars
just like pines, slightly disappointing... confirms my theory that the series could've been condensed into a singular book but nonetheless, didn't necessarily dislike the story, just didn't have the same thrill the first had
Wow. I cant believe I read a trilogy in a week. Great, cling to your seat story and the ending has made me go “wow” all day. Its not at all how I thought the story would end. Amazing.
Although the first half of the book is quite monotonous, it picks up the pace really quickly after a while. An excellent conclusion to the sci-fi thriller trilogy.
Here is my Amazon review - Please give me helpful vote - http://www.amazon.com/review/R3IZDF4J3C0AMQ/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm
This book seems to have started life as an “internet serialized thriller.” Internet serialized thriller is a genre that evolved to fit the internet. The stories are short, fast-paced and formulaic. Part of the formula is to make the revelation and bait the hook so that readers buy the next instalment, and, heaven help us, the formula works.
Unfortunately, this leads to non-novels; to books that are really a novel cut into roughly equal portions, hooked together by a cliffhanger and then an seamless pick up from the cliffhanger in the next book. I jumped from Pines to The Last Town because I thought that The Last Town would enter into the territory of Season 2 of the miniseries. It doesn't by the way. This book – Wayward – is part of the Wayward Pines trilogy, composed of Wayward, Pines and The Last Town. These books have been turned into the Wayward Pines summer television miniseries, starring Matt Dillon. The first season covers these books. The second season represents a major departure from the novel (novellas?). Actually, the reader who has seen the miniseries is in for some surprises as the television production made substantial changes in characters and backstories.
Although the secrets of Wayward Pines are probably known to most everyone after the miniseries, I still don't want to give away the big reveal, which is what kept me speed reading through this book, even though I had seen the show.
I did enjoyed this book, but, honestly, I was not deeply invested in it. I was mostly interested in seeing how it would end. Nonetheless, it was fast pace and suspenseful, albeit the characters were a bit too two-dimensional and most of the book was taken up in the action element of dealing with the Abbie incursion - what in Season 2 is called “Invasion Day,” albeit Season 2 of the miniseries is a total departure from the novels.
The story opens with former Secret Service agent Ethan Burke dealing with his decision in the last book - Wayward - to save Kate and Harold's life from a “fete” by telling the town the truth. Pilcher retaliates by shutting off the electric fence and opening the gate. 85% of the book, thereafter, is simply the townsfolk running away from the Abbies. There are back-stories that explain some of the mysteries and relationships in the story. We also get scenes of Burke's old boss, Hassler, making his way back to town. Burke's aim is to have a show-down with Pilcher, which he does and then we learn some more information, setting up the next “hook” for the next instalment.
You can tell that this “novel” is actually part of a single novel that was “meat-cleavered” into its own stand-alone book. If you come to this book without having read the prior books - and although I have seen the mini-series, I did not read the middle-book - the opening is jarring because, after an introduction with Pilcher stepping outside of the Arc for the first time, this book simply picks up from the events of the night before - the fete - without pause, as if it was just the next chapter in a single novel. I would have been completely lost if I didn't have the background of the miniseries.
Nonetheless, the story clipped along nicely. The problems were presented and resolved in journeyman fashion. The characters seemed fairly two-dimensional. This is a classic bit of summer reading/escapist fare.
I have to confess, though, that I am interested in what happens after Ethan opens his eyes after the last line of the book.
This book finishes the tale of the “idyllic” town of Wayward Pines located in a mountainous Idaho valley. As the story progressed from the first book reveal, it reminded me in some ways of H. G. Wells' Time Machine. In this case the few hundred residents of Wayward Pines are a bit like the Eloi and the world outside the valley that of the Moorlocks. But here the people of Wayward Pines are kept in the dark by the psychopathic leader that put them into their situation and rules over them like a demented god. When Ethan Burke, now acting as town sheriff, takes a big gamble and decides to reveal to the town's population the truth about Wayward Pines, it sets in motion a series of events that will lead to the town's destruction and the deaths of most of its inhabitants. That leaves the final question to be answered “Is there any way out for the remaining inhabitants of Wayward Pines?” Even though this story included some sappy love story drama that really didn't add much to the tale, the basic imaginative core of the story and the many action sequences had me racing through pages ‘til the end.