![]() ![]() But there’s definitely something weird afoot. Her parents decide to move from Rhode Island to Florida to give her a new start and she begins school at a private academy, Croyden. It’s not at all clear, and she’s barely holding together. Maybe she has PTSD, but maybe she is psychotic. Mara Dyer, 17, thinks she has been causing her friends to die. There is a third book, not out yet at the time of this review.) Thus, it is almost inevitable (and yet unusual) that the second book is, in my opinion, better than the first, because only in the second does the story finally start making sense, and at the end we get a bit more of a wrap-up than in the first book. (However, I should add we aren’t done yet. It is only in the second that we start to get some answers. In no way would I consider it an “ending” of any sort. ![]() When the first one ends (in a great big cliffhanger), readers still don’t know what is going on. The reason I am reviewing these together is that I refuse to accept that they aren’t actually one big book. ![]()
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