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Pandemonium lauren oliver character7/2/2023 ![]() She has grown stronger, both physically and mentally, and she is ready to fight against everything she believed before. She is no longer the scared, timid girl she was in Portland. Either way, Lena has to earn friendships wherever she goes. I like that it's easy to see the general camaraderie between Lena and her new allies, whether they be other Invalids like herself or those from the inside. And it introduces an entirely new cast of characters, all of whom are hard to forget. This book was poignant and sad and all the while hopeful. Lena's story is not an easy one to tell, but Lauren Oliver does it beautifully. And she's done surprisingly well for herself, considering how privileged her life had been before her escape. Lena has had to leave that life behind and forge her own way in the Wilds without Alex's help. Lena's life has changed fundamentally in the six months since she was forced to leave Alex at the fence and embark into the Wilds on her own. Whereas Delirium was the build-up to an engaging love story, Pandemonium was wrought with the fears and circumstances of what comes after, in a world where love is illegal and punished. I think.no, I KNOW I loved the sequel more than Delirium. I was afraid of the middle-book slump, that "second book in a trilogy is just a filler" feeling you get from the second installment in a series - the one that determines whether or not you'll pick up the last book - but Pandemonium surpassed all of my hopes. I wasn't sure what to expect from the sequel to Delirium, a book I loved in 2011. WARNING: If you don't like cliffhangers, I suggest you wait until Requiem is released next year before picking up Pandemonium.
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