The godhead complex

James Dashner, 1972-

Book - 2023

In the second book of The Maze Cutter Trilogy ... Sadina and the islanders are up against both man and nature as they navigate their way to Alaska. There, they hope to meet the mysterious Godhead, unsure of what separates myth from truth. But the Godhead, now led by Alexandra, is fractured. Within the cracks of their sacred trinity, secrets are revealed that blur the lines of good and evil forever. One person's God is another person's Devil.--Publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Young adult fiction
Dystopian fiction
Action and adventure fiction
Published
[Red Bank, NJ] : Akashic Media Enterprises [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
James Dashner, 1972- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
262 pages ; 24 cm
Audience
012-018.
ISBN
9798985955224
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The Flare virus continues to exact a heavy price, as multiple characters discover in this sequel to Maze Cutter (2022). In a mosaic assemblage of short or multipart chapters that series readers will tolerate without frustration, Dashner sends groups (including no fewer than seven point-of-view characters) on various quests. As Ximena heads north from her Baja village in hopes of finding her tardy mother, escapees from the island of immunes reach the coast and split up so that Sadina can get her ominously sick mom to Villa doctors. Meanwhile, Minho and others make their way to the opener's titular ship and then on to Alaska to kill (or maybe join) the sacerdotal trio dubbed the Godhead. Meanwhile, said Godhead--Nicholas, Alexandra, and Mikhail--is down to two, as one is left as a decapitated head in a glass box, and the survivors wrestle with different flavors of creeping madness. Presaged by encounters with corpses and the odd stabbing, a horrific medical procedure, and a climactic battle with an army of diseased, zombielike Cranks, the unwieldy company is scattered and on the run: Stay tuned for more rousingly icky developments. The main cast largely reads white, with the exceptions of Ximena, Minho, and Frypan, a long-continuing character who has aged here into Old Man Frypan and was previously described as dark-skinned. Crowded and pointillistic: still readable but best for confirmed fans. (Dystopian. 12-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.