![]() Same with him being skeptical about Quinn’s fishing business. I don’t know why Sam thought asking kids to work just because they’re hungry would do anything where as Albert’s idea of paying kids with batteries or something to work would be perfect. The whole time Albert was operating his night club and setting up a bartering system and trying to work out a currency I couldn’t understand why Sam was against any of that. And he is great in a crisis but day to day not so much. My poor baby Sam is now the leader and he made it clear he never wanted that but now he’s stuck with it. I know it was important to his character but at the end of the last book he was so on top of things and I get that they’re starving but he just seemed really unsure of himself. ![]() I also did not enjoy all the self pity wallowing coming from Sam and his extreme lack of confidence about things. ![]() For me Gone was so great because the book was very fast paced, and it always felt like something was happening whereas in Hunger a lot of the book felt very slow to me. I think what I didn’t like most about this book compared to Gone was the pace. There were parts I liked and then parts I really didn’t like. So go read it and then read the second book and come back. ![]() If you haven’t read Gone I have a review here that you can go read. There’s really nothing to say here since this is the second book in the Gone Series by Michael Grant. ![]()
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