Ratings37
Average rating3.9
In the distant future, when fifteen-year-old Wren Natsworthy, bored with life in Anchorage, steals an Old-Tech book for a Lost Boy, she sets off a sequence of events that leads her parents, Tom and Hester, back into battle with old enemies and new.
Featured Series
5 primary booksMortal Engines Quartet is a 7-book series with 5 primary works first released in 2001 with contributions by Philip Reeve, Jeremy Levett, and Chris Priestley.
Reviews with the most likes.
Het begin en het einde waren goed. Het middenstuk vond ik echt matig (gewoon de helft van het boek). Heel jammer, omdat de boeken wel heel leuk zijn. Ik dit deel komt Wren erbij en ik moet zeggen dat ik haar soms echt niet snapte. Ik snap dat ze 15 is, maar soms was ze een beetje TE puberaal. Door het eind ben ik wel ontzettend benieuwd naar het laatste deel!!
Another solid entry into the Mortal Engines Quartet.
By the third book in the series, sixteen years have passed. Hester and Tom are in their thirties, and we focus on their daughter, Wren. I found Wren to be a really enjoyable character who combined some of the most enjoyable qualities of both her parents. The book remained a consistent pace to the previous one, and in terms of quality I felt it was equally as good.
Other reviews have touched upon it, so I will be brief, but Hester does not remain as lovable as she was as a child. In the earlier books, Hester was an understandable asshole who had redeemable qualities. She felt strongly for Tom, and that motivated her to make (mostly) good decisions. In this book, she is bizarrely jealous of her own daughter. It really screams of those stories of monster-in-laws who hate their daughter-in-law they are ‘loosing' their son to. It really didn't seem how I thought Hester would become, but hopefully book four may salvage her character.