I really enjoyed the Resistance Trilogy (the first 3 books in this interconnecting saga), but this one fell a bit flat for me. The beginning was very slow and it made it difficult for me to want to return to it after setting it down. Once the pace picked up, I started to enjoy it more, and I always love getting to know the new environments that each city has turned into in every book. The world building for the city in this one was especially unique and visually effective. I became frustrated with some tonal issues starting from the very beginning of the book. Characters’ reaction/emotions/dialogue don’t seem to match the dire situation they are in, and it made it difficult for me to ever feel that they were truly in danger. I love how they don’t let their past traumas get them down, but the mood was confusing for me. I didn’t understand why they were giggling constantly. They live in an apocalyptic wasteland, have lost nearly everything again and again, are targeted by a corrupt and dangerous government, and have all been through hell and back, and yet they giggle halfway through the book. Some of the lighter, joyful moments worked very well. I just think the tone would have benefited from spreading these moments out more, placing them in between moments of danger and intensity, for brief moments of levity. The dialogue started to grate on my nerves as well, most of it quite juvenile and not realistic to how teenagers, much less teenagers in this situation would be speaking. One example of this is the constant Manthy/Cardyn bickering. I do love their dynamic, and several moments of theirs made me laugh, but they needed some moments where they acted mature. I really loved the scene where the conspiracy got mixed up with some dangerous people when they entered the city, and how they dealt with that. The notes of humor, mixed with having each others backs, and also enough air of seriousness so that the reader understands how dangerous the situation is, was really effective for me. I was laughing so hard when Rain corrected his grammar! I am also confused on some of the plot points. For example, in the processor in the Resistance trilogy, Emergents were being killed for displaying abilities. In this book, Amani tells the conspiracy that kids in his processor were being killed for NOT being Emergents. Also, I don’t know if I like all of the conspiracy being Emergents. It kind of defeats the purpose of them being in the processor, and in the processor, only three of them were flagged as Emergents, and were scheduled to be killed. If the government is seeking Emergents, why would they kill them? Emergents seem very valuable to the government as the books develop, and I don’t understand why the author changed their mind so abruptly on this topic, in the midst of the series. I considered DNFing several times, but am glad I stuck it out, for that firecracker ending. I will be reading the next one but am unsure if I will continue with all 15 books in the saga.