i loved this series, and this was such a satisfying end to it.

Decent end to the series.
adventurous emotional hopeful informative inspiring relaxing medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

3.75 stars

It was tense but I thought it was a good ending to the trilogy!

I have no words. I can't write a proper review for this book, and this series, as it's hard to form words. I could go on all day about books I hate, but series like UTNS, where the writing flows so perfectly, and you connect with the characters and plot so well, it's hard to really say what's good about it, because the answer is everything.

This book, as a conclusion to the trilogy, couldn't have done a better job. The ending made me cry, pretty much the entire way from chapter 38 onwards until the end. And if a book can make me cry from pure emotion, I know it's a good book. Plus, the most heartwrenching part would have to be either
Spoiler when Cinder is crying, scared of dying, especially as, we presume, he does die as he's never heard from again, and the tiders name the new city Cinder in his memory
or
Spoiler when Aria and Perry are saying goodbye to each other, not knowing if they'll ever see each other again
.

So yes, I love this series. I would reccmmened it to everyone who reads YA/Dystopian/Sci-Fi. This is one of my favourite ever series. Definitely worth 5 stars.

Incredible. Breathtaking. Remarkable. If you can’t tell I really enjoyed this book. Into the Still Blue is the final book in the Under the Never Sky series and cemented the series as one of my all-time favorites.
This is it. This is the conclusion we have been ambitiously since page one of Under the Never Sky. This is do or die. Literally. The aether storms are worse than ever, and the key to survival is who can make it to the Still Blue first, but of course there’s a catch. Only one person known to them can control the aether in order to open a path for them to get to the Still Blue. Cinder.
The first part of the book is a fast-paced information packed mission to get Cinder back from Sable and Hess. There we FINALLY learn who Aria’s father is and like Aria I was so torn because I wanted her to have a relationship with him, but at the same time I was skeptical.
Not only do we learn who her father is, but we learn about how Cinder gained his incredible abilities. My heart broke for Cinder who just wants to have a normal life with Perry and the Tides, but whose fate was determined early on by those who gave him his abilities.
The entire book was a breathless ride that I could not put down, but at the same time I tried to savor because I knew it was the ending. I am hardly every fully satisfied with the way things end in a trilogy, especially with one that has as high stakes at this one, but truly this was one of the best books I’ve read. My only regret is that I did not read it sooner. I highly recommend this to anyone who has not yet read it.

The final volume of this trilogy was a fun, fast read- easy to get through and enjoyable. It provided a satisfactory ending to the set, although parts of it seems a little too neatly done. Still, a thoroughly enjoyable book you can tear through in an afternoon. I really liked all three books immensely- solid, well-written YA books with plenty of adventure and peril.

Great ending to a series I have really enjoyed. There were parts that kept me on the edge of my seat. Love Aria & Perry, they had great scenes. Plus Roar is always fun :)

3.5 stars

This was so compulsively readable, just easy and fun.
Overall fine characters, but I was not connected to any of them at all.
I will take a break from dystopian YA for now... I'm not really feeling it anymore.

This was enjoyable tho :)