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Gone 2: Hunger - Community Reviews back

by Jaqueline Csuss, Michael Grant
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Lost Girls Reviews
Lost Girls Reviews rated it 7 years ago
Warning: There will be spoilers for book 1 in the series This book takes place 3 months after the previous book ended. Food is running out and the kids are getting desperate. They are eating anything they can find. Boiling grass and weeds, random mushrooms, the occasional pigeon if one can be ca...
Housewife Blues and Chihuahua Stories
Book InfoEBOOK, 608 pagesPublished May 26th 2009 by Katherine Tegen Books (first published 2009)original title HungerISBN 0061911496 (ISBN13: 9780061911491)edition language Englishseries Gone #2characters Sam Temple, Astrid Ellison, Little Pete, Caine Soren, Diana Ladris setting Perdido Beach, Calif...
LaytonReads
LaytonReads rated it 11 years ago
Actual Rating: 4.5
Url Phantomhive
Url Phantomhive rated it 11 years ago
This is the second book in the Gone series, and we're now three months in the FAYZ, where the kids are starting to find out that doing nothing equals no food. No food equals hunger and starvation. Another recipe for trouble. This book is darker than Gone, and that wasn't exactly pink fluffy unicor...
Mike
Mike rated it 11 years ago
This is the best piece of YA commercial lit I've ever read.Books filled with action like this, ones that are obviously marketed exclusively towards reluctant readers and boys (publishing companies typically consider the two to be one and the same) are usually books that I'm warry of, for the obvious...
jaydamber
jaydamber rated it 11 years ago
just as enthralling as the first book in the series, though a lot darker and with bigger teen themes being tackled. action-packed and filled with plot twists also, more characters and their powers are introduced, even though some of them may not return... a realistic book, it captures the real human...
Komal
Komal rated it 11 years ago
Hunger is just as captivating and thrilling as Gone but the character development was 'meh'. I found Sam to be a bit unrealistic. He is only fifteen, yet he is the 'mayor', tries to take care of 300 kids, fails (what a surprise) and drowns himself in self-pity. Hell, WHAT fifteen year old guy, who o...
99 problems, and a book ain't one
99 problems, and a book ain't one rated it 11 years ago
Michael Grant is a seriously talented writer. There is so much detail that goes into these books, the environment, the people, the monsters....they are all described so well that it literally paints this whole horrifying picture in your mind. And I love it! Seriously though, where does he come up wi...
ShaunOK 'Book Addict'
ShaunOK 'Book Addict' rated it 12 years ago
I found this book difficult to get into but once I did it was just as good, if not better than the first book. Once again the feminist reviews point out that the book seems to make boy characters great and the girl characters not so great. I disagree with that. That might have been the case slightly...
melsbookshelf
melsbookshelf rated it 12 years ago
This review has been a long time coming but I really haven't had time to sit down and put my thoughts together to write it thanks to work. Today I finally am doing just that, even though it's been awhile (for me) since I finished it. The final verdict? A worthy effort, but Hunger just doesn't live u...
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