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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: The Maze Runner, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. Dylan O’Brien Takes the Heat in The Scorch Trials Trailer

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2. James Dashner Inks 3-Book Deal at Random House Children’s Books

The Maze Runner author James Dashner has signed a 3-book deal with Random House Children’s Books’  Delacorte Press imprint. Executive Editor Krista Marino negotiated the deal with Dystel & Goderich Literary Management vice president Michael Bourret.

Starting in fall 2013, Delacorte will publish the titles of The Mortality Doctrine series for North American readers. Book one, The Eye of Minds, will come out in both print and eBook format simultaneously. Dashner (pictured, via) has also written original short stories to accompany this series; these shorts will be released in eBook format.

Here’s more from the release: “The series is set in an exciting — and frightening—world of hyper-advanced technology, cyber terrorists, and gaming…The VirtNet is total mind and body immersion, and it’s addictive. Recent reports claim that there’s a gamer going beyond what any gamer has ever done before. He’s holding players hostage inside the VirtNet, and the side–effects are horrific. His hostages have all been diagnosed as brain dead—and no one knows what his goal is. The government knows that to catch a hacker, you need a hacker. And they’ve been watching Michael.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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3. A Craving for Dystopia

It might seem like nothing could match The Hunger Games, but there are already lots of great choices out there.

In fact, the hardest part may not be finding great dystopian series, but trying to decide which one to begin first.

Here's just a sample:

The Legend series by Marie Lu is set on the flooded coast of former Los Angeles and is told from the perspective of two 15-year-old characters on either side of a civil war. Los Angeles is now the Republic, a nation at war with its neighbors and riddled with a plague. Born of the slums, a boy named Day steals to keep his family alive and rebels against the state police, and June, a military prodigy from an elite family, hunts him down. The two seem to be from different worlds until June's brother is murdered and they discover the sinister truth behind the plague that's killing the nations' poor people. The second book, Patriot, comes out this fall. Penguin, $17.99, ages 12 and up, 336 pages.

The Chaos Walking series by Patrick Ness is about 13-year-old Todd, the only boy in a town of men where everyone's thoughts can be heard. The town is run by a corrupt mayor who wants to vest control of the planet and wipe out its indigenous alien race and Todd, an orphan, is determined to stop him with the help of Viola Eade, a girl who crash lands on his planet. The first book The Knife of Never Letting Go came out in 2008, followed by The Ask and The Answer in 2009 and Monsters of Men in 2010. Candlewick, $18.99 per hardback, $ 9.99 per softcover, ages 14 and up, 496-608 pages. Chaos Walking: The Complete Trilogy is now available as an ebook for $29.97.

4. Legend: Same Dystopia, Different Day

Legend-marie-lu     Absolutely everyone has noticed the rash of dystopian YA novels kicking around the bookstore these days. I was recently in the wonderland that is Powell's Books in Portland, Oregon, and their YA room had a great "I'm Dystopian!" display. Author Philip Reeve wrote about the phenomenon in this month's School Library Journal. And you can't escape the promotions for the upcoming movie version of The Hunger Games. I'm guilty of being quietly obsessed with the genre ever since I started teaching Lois Lowry's classic The Giver twenty or so years ago.

    Well, in the past few years, I've read: The Hunger Games series, The Maze Runner series, the Chaos Walking series, the Gone series, the Uglies series, Incarceron, Divergent, Matched, Delerium, Enclave, Shipbreaker, The Roar, etc., etc., etc. Lots and lots of 'em. Some of them are great (Shipbreaker, Delerium, Chaos Walking series); some are very good (Maze Runner, Uglies, Gone, Incarceron). All of them are addictively readable.  For some reason I cannot fathom, we are fascinated with our own inevitable, horrific future. What we know for sure: Earth will suffer many cataclysmic disasters which will (probably) be our fault; the new government of what is left of the U.S. will be oppressive and totalitarian; the poor will be really poor and the rich will be really rich. And one last thing: Some plucky teenager with mad fighting and survival skills will soon see it all for what it is and will fight back.

    So what is different about Marie Lu's Legend, which will be published later this year and has already been optioned for the screen? Truthfully, not much. When I received the galley of Legend and read the back cover, I actually groaned. Aloud, not inwardly. My obsession was in danger of spilling over into compulsion: Yet another dystopian novel I must read. No, really, I just can't do it again. Please make it stop!

    Still, I cracked Legend open and began. Original it ain't, but, I gotta tell you, I liked it.  I liked it a lot. Despite being able to predict almost everything that was going to happen, I couldn't put Legend down. And if it's done right, it could make an awesome film. At the very least, it would be a great video game.

    June is a war-ready prodigy in the future Republic of America, a perfect soldier-to-be, who grew up in the golden light of Los Angeles's richest district. Day is a prodigy of another kind. He is from one of the city's poorest districts, and he's also the country's most wanted terrorist/criminal.  June and Day could not have come from more contrasting origins, but their worlds are about to collide in a big way.

    When Day's family is quarantined because of a breakout of the newest strain of plague to run through the L.A. slum areas, he needs to steal some plague cure quick. June's brother Matias, who seems to be the ultimate Republic soldier, is murdered at the hospital on the night that Day tries to swipe a few vials of the cure. Now, Day is the number-one suspect in the crime, and June is out to exact her revenge.

    Soon, however, June and Day cross paths in a most unlikely way.  An uneasy alliance, even a touch of romance develops, and June and Day start to uncover some horrifying trut

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5. Of Library Ninjas, Sith and Good Reads!!!!!


Hi all in the "Land o Blog!!!!" Hope everything is rolling along well for everyone. Over the weekend I visited one of my old Ninja Librarian Instructors Darth Bane. Not the most cheerful cat in this here galaxy a long time ago and far away, but most excellent to hang out with and play video games with (I tell ya he rules at Mario Kart!!!!) and practice wicked ninja maneuvers. Well enough about my bud Darth Bane, as you can see he has enough on his mind, lets talk about some recent reads of mine. Also that reminds me, at any time please feel free to comment on the blog about good reads you know about (share the wealth dudes and dudets)!!!! Onward then:



The Maze Runner by James Dashner - Imagine waking up in a small glade surrounded by 4 huge walls with four openings. You can remember nothing of your past (who your parents are, where you lived, your friends, etc.). You find yourself in a colony composed of only teen aged boys who share the same condition you do. Outside the walls is a maze that could lead to escape and freedom. The only problem is the walls of the maze change every night, when you must be back in the central glade that you woke up in. Why must you be back in this central glade? Because at night the four openings close and if you are trapped outside you are as good as dead because of deadly monsters (part organic, part machine) that patrol the maze 24 hours a day and kill whomever they find.
Finally one day arrives when a comatose girl arrives with a note reading: She's the last one. Ever.  This is exactly what happens in this story to a teen named Thomas. This book is full of adventure, cool characters and unexpected happening that will keep you turning the pages until you are finished. Unfortunately at the end of the book you have to wait for the next one comes out to see what happens next. Great Book!!!!!!!


Yu-Gi-Oh! R by Akira Ito - This Manga Series I found to be really fun to read and have flown through Volumes 1 - 4. The mai

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