Book 1:
A lot of reviews, including my own, compared The Testing (book1) to the Hunger Games - same death trial plot and same female and male MCs with trust and PG13 romance issues to work out in the backdrop as they race, test for their lives. The Testing was basically a more political, education based version of the Hunger Games .. without a love triangle. It was an okay read that I only continued because the possibility of it all being erased from the MCs memories in the second book.
Book 2:
The second book, Independent Study, was even more disappointing than the first. The author tried to carry some of the action from the first book over to the college setting and it just felt forced and unbelievable, as do the character's reactions considering what's been done to them. For example, Tomas knew what was coming for initiation & how dangerous it would be, but he never bothered to warn Cia, whom he claimed to love. There was very little progression of characters or romance & that was unfortunate since all of it wasn't very fleshed out in book1. Like in book 1, the story is told from Cia's POV & in large part through exhausting inner diatribes that make her a very unrealistic fruit salad turnover of prudish, holier than tho, naive, and intelligence.
Book 3:
Graduation was like jumping from a sinking ship straight into a steaming pile of quicksand.
Cia went from bad to insufferable.
I didn't think it possible to get more irritated with Cia's inner diatribes, but I wanted to punch this naive chick in the face and tell her to wake the f up! In an effort, I can only assume, for the author to make Cia appear to grow, learn the author ended up making her a neurotic, Pollyanna, dumbass. She obsessed over the trivial. She was oblivious to the plot conclusion that slapped me in the face 1/3 through the book. She wants to end the testing but is willing to engage in the VERY same tactics to gauge who's trustworthy... All while she is pointing her moral compass against killing to end the testing. Etc...
Tomas is just there.
Tomas is just someone to fill in some dialogue and act as a lap dog for Cia. This is not a romance in any sense of the term. He is merely the Ken doll that sits in the Barbie car as all the other dolls play a round of political conspiracy.
Tell, tell, tell, tell...
OMG this book was on replay times 10. Everything was told; retold, and, just in case the reader had the IQ if tree bark, told again. Take out the repetitive inner monologues and Cia telling multiple characters the same stories, & I doubt the book would be 100 pages. Yeah, I'm serious!
The testing destruction plot went from being the only shinning star afforded to this trilogy to it's most absurd element in the ending.
The political conspiracy was transparent and nonsensical. If x character really was the one who wanted the Testing, it would make no sense for x character to go about publicly threatening to dismantle it... That's not a ploy that would ever make sense. Likewise, this character would never make good on the bargain once all those that were in any kind of position to stop said character from their agenda were all eliminated. The author already told us where the power to control the testing rested, making the ending pointless since this character already had control to make the changes without any bargain; what could he possibly benefit from making the bargain when all the control was his to begin with? I digress... Nonsensical ending to the plot.
The characters end on a very open note, which doesn't bother me because I don't really give 2 arses by the last page wtf happens to them. But, for those seeking rainbows and hearts at the end... Ain't happening!