From the Bookshelf of Ruins Q&A with Dan Wells…
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What Members Thought

I loved the first one. I'm not surprised I loved the second. What surprised me is how unexpected this book is. I've read enough genre fiction that I can pretty well predict where a lot of stories are headed. Not so much this one. Wells can pull out a surprise, and his writing is gripping. Like, I let my kids watch TV all day so I could read kind of gripping.
The story this time follows Kira as she goes out to look for a cure for RM that doesn't rely on access to Partials and follows her human fri ...more
The story this time follows Kira as she goes out to look for a cure for RM that doesn't rely on access to Partials and follows her human fri ...more

Kira Walker has discovered the cure for RM, but has no idea how she did it! She knows it has something to do with the Partials and that they are the carriers of the cure, but she intends to find a way to manufacture it without draining Partials for it. Plus, there's another problem out there which is fueling the Partials into actions which could be detrimental to every human left because they have a ticking bomb of an end date and a group will do anything to find a cure to live. Kira just wants
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This an example of a second book in a series that is more exciting than the first. I deliberately waited until I read Siege and Storm so I could review the two books together. I anticipate doing the same with the third books - Ruin and Rising (Grisha #3) and Ruins (Partials Sequence #3) - when they come out next year.
After learning that she is neither human (as she was brought up) nor a standard Partial (the enemies she was brought up to fear), Kira sets out on a voyage of discovery. She hopes t ...more
After learning that she is neither human (as she was brought up) nor a standard Partial (the enemies she was brought up to fear), Kira sets out on a voyage of discovery. She hopes t ...more

I thought I had a good idea of what to expect from the dystopian YA genre, and from this series. This is the second book, so one expects a certain amount of wheel-spinning and delaying tactics. Instead, this is a ramping-up of an already intriguing series.
In Partials , Kira Walker found a one-time cure for RM, the disease that killed most of humanity and kills all newborns after just a couple of days. But it's not a permanent solution. In Fragments, she goes to the Manhattan headquarters of P ...more
In Partials , Kira Walker found a one-time cure for RM, the disease that killed most of humanity and kills all newborns after just a couple of days. But it's not a permanent solution. In Fragments, she goes to the Manhattan headquarters of P ...more

Once again, Dan Wells delivers a compelling story with difficult moral questions. What I particularly like about his dystopian future is that it's not just about characters trying to survive, but about people actively trying to heal society. At the same time, there are complex choices and no simple solution. Highly recommended.
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I don't know who I hate more, Dan for writing such a good book, me for finishing it so quickly, or him for not having the next one out yet.
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I am really loving this series. I wasn't sure how I would enjoy reading a post apocalypse/dystopian type book but this series has inspired me to explore the genre even more. I'm almost wishing I wouldn't have read Fragments so soon after being released because now it's going to be a long wait for book 3. But I have no doubt that it'll be worth it.
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Apr 18, 2012
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