I think Dust bothers me so much because it left me with a lot of unanswered questions.īecause I’ve been dying to discuss these books with other readers, there are going to be ***major spoilers*** after the jump. It had the same style and tone as Dust though, and neither of them felt as authentic as Wool. Howey kept up the breakneck pace, and continued to deliver strong, memorable characters. There was a lot about Dust that worked really well. The end of a series always has enormous expectations to fill, and I get a bit nervous anytime I’m reading a final installment. Dust was neither of those things.ĭust is the conclusion of the series, the end of the story, the last glimpse of these characters that I’ve grown to know and love so much. I was so excited to read Shift because it told the story of how the Silo came into being. (You can read my geek out here, so I won’t subject you to it again.) I loved it deep down in my bones, and it continues to haunt me weeks later. In Wool, Howey creates the world of the Silo. (Does anyone else do this when they finish a book?) But a few weeks have past now I’ve had some time to reflect on it, and I’m just not sure. I enjoyed Dust a lot, and when I immediately finished it, I gave it a 4 crown rating in my head. I’m having some fixed feelings about the conclusion to the Silo Series. What would you do if the fate of everyone you knew rested in your hands?Īnd the choices you made could lead to their salvation, or be the death of us all.
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