And, as if that weren't enough to totally harsh their collective mellow, the government unleashes a madness-causing death virus. It's about a few people who find themselves left over after sun-flares cook the surface of the earth. This novel is also just, quite simply, an action-packed, edge-of-your-seat thrillride of a book. And it's not just about watching a dude spiraling into full-blown crazytown. We get to witness a man in the full grip of Flare looney-tunes madness.īut The Kill Order isn't just about wrapping up the loose ends left over from the harrowing three-part Maze Runner phenomenon. Sure, he doesn't go completely cuckoo-he's not, for example, worried about Rose taking his nose-but we get to see glimpses of pure insanity. That's right, The Kill Order-James Dashner's fourth and final Maze Runner book-actually focuses on a man infected with the Flare. Go back and read the entire Maze Runner trilogy before you start this bad boy this novel is the prequel.) (Important Shmoop PSA: before you go any further, ask yourself: do the words "Scorch" or "Cranks" mean anything to you? If the answer is "No," stop right here. Before the Maze, before the Scorch, before WICKED-there was Mark: one of the original Cranks.
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