The Legacy (The Declaration #3)
by:
Gemma Malley (author)
When a Pincent Pharmaceutical van is ambushed by the rebel group known as the Underground, its contents come as a huge surprise-not drugs, but corpses in a horrible state. It appears that the pharmaceutical company's top drug, Longevity-which is supposed to eradicate disease and ensure eternal...
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When a Pincent Pharmaceutical van is ambushed by the rebel group known as the Underground, its contents come as a huge surprise-not drugs, but corpses in a horrible state. It appears that the pharmaceutical company's top drug, Longevity-which is supposed to eradicate disease and ensure eternal life-isn't living up to its promises. Now a virus is sweeping the country, killing hundreds in its wake, and Longevity is powerless to fight it. But when the unscrupulous head of Pincent claims that the Underground is responsible for releasing the virus, it's up to Peter, Anna, and their friends to alert the world to the terrifying truth behind Longevity before it's too late.
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9781599905679 (1599905671)
Publish date: January 4th 2011
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Pages no: 272
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Young Adult,
Adventure,
Teen,
Science Fiction,
Romance,
Mystery,
Dystopia,
Death,
Apocalyptic,
Post Apocalyptic
Series: The Declaration (#3)
The end is sort of clusterfuck of double crosses and betrayals. You never have time to figure out what really is going on before the next twist is introduced. And I'm sorry but Anna and Peter are supposed to be 16 or 17 and they're raising two children on their own and helping lead a revolution that...
I read The Declaration (Book #1) ages and ages ago, and I absolutely loved it. It was one of the books that made me fall in love with the dystopian genre as a whole. A few years later I read The Resistance (Book #2), which I didn't enjoy as much, but I still thought it was a good book. I was pumped ...
So, this is the end of the Declaration series as it currently stands and I found The Legacy to be a moving and befitting ending to a series that has kept me on my toes, questioned philosophical and ethical matters and delivered them in Gemma Malley's beautiful writing.However, it has to be said that...