Review: Blackout by Mira Grant
Title: Blackout
Author: Mira Grant
Series: Newsflesh Trilogy #3
Rating: 5 out of 5 Stars
Published May 22th 2012 by Orbit
Purchased
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Okay, I know it for sure now. This book is one of my all time favourites.
This book. This whole series. It’s so, so, so GOOD.
In this third and last part in the Newsflesh Trilogy, the After The End Times bloggers play the endgame. It’s now or never, all or nothing. All the bodies they left in their wake are a dark presence they have to live with. Will they uncover the conspiracy before the government finds them and shut them up once and for all?
To be honest, I wouldn’t recommend Blackout, or any of the books in this series if you are looking for a gruesome zombie book. Because to be honest, the amount of zombie encounters in this book is minimal. It’s not about the shambling dead. It’s about how fear can be used to control countries. It’s about how easily people are persuaded when they are afraid, and how easy it is to scare them. These books are so much more than just zombie reads.
And it has intricate story lines! Hurray! I loved how all the threads came together in this one, and the fact that no questions were left unanswered. Blackout had some massive plot twists that literally made me go “oh my god oh my god what’s happening”. It’s that good.
The only fault is something I don’t mind personally, but I get why other people might get annoyed by it. There is some repetition in sentences and scenes. For example, the main characters are subjected to blood tests at every single building. But the thing is, repeating the fact that there are blood tests over and over again actually has a purpose in the story. It shows how paranoid everyone has become. It shows how repressed and twisted their society actually is. There was no unnecessary repetition in the story in my opinion.
If I was rich, I would gift these books to every person I know. Since I can’t even afford buying myself new books, I will have to settle for recommending it to everyone I know. Seriously guys. These are keepers.
The year was 2014. The year we cured cancer. The year we cured the common cold. And the year the dead started to walk. The year of the Rising.
The year was 2039. The world didn’t end when the zombies came, it just got worse. Georgia and Shaun Mason set out on the biggest story of their generation. The uncovered the biggest conspiracy since the Rising and realized that to tell the truth, sacrifices have to be made.
Now, the year is 2041, and the investigation that began with the election of President Ryman is much bigger than anyone had assumed. With too much left to do and not much time left to do it in, the surviving staff of After the End Times must face mad scientists, zombie bears, rogue government agencies-and if there’s one thing they know is true in post-zombie America, it’s this:
Things can always get worse.
- Review: Deadline by Mira Grant (5/5 Stars)
- Review: Generation by William Knight (4/5 Stars)
- Review: The Replacement by Brenna Yovanoff (4/5 Stars)
- Review: Gossip Girl, Psycho Killer by Cecily von Ziegesar (4/5 Stars)
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