3.44 AVERAGE


Panic follows the story of a small town named Carp, in Upstate New York. Every summer, the town holds a high-stake competition with the graduating seniors called Panic, where the winner wins a jackpot of around 50,000 dollars. Meet our two main characters; Heather-- a girl who never planned to join but after being broken up with by her boyfriend she joins on a spur of the moment decision, and Dodge-- a boy fueled by revenge for what the game did to his older sister, Dayna. Who will ultimately win? And who will pay the price?

So many people told me this book was going to be bad. Like an overwhelming amount of people. But one day, I decided to buy the damn book and I refuse to un-haul books I have bought myself, and so alas on this fateful day I decided to give this book the benefit of the doubt because why not? Yeah, now I know EXACTLY why not.

The ONE resounding positive I can give this book is the atmosphere.I have a special place in my heart for claustrophobic small towns where everyone knows each other a little too well. The desperation and claustrophobia of the characters felt like it was oozing off the book's pages. The sweltering heat and tension in the air was some epic pathetic fallacy may I add. Yeah, the only thing I liked about this book was that it was hot outside. Oh, maybe also that they didn't ship Dodge and Heather together, and so at least I didn't feel a need to hit my head against a wall. Yay me!

The first main issue I had was connecting with the characters and their motivations; Heather decides to join in like TWO seconds. She has just broken up with her boyfriend and she's like 'fuck this I'm joining!' and I don't really know how they correlate? Impulsiveness is an interesting concept, and we never truly get to understand further why she decided to do it. The boyfriend comes back in like two scenes, and so we never truly get an idea of how Heather feels about why she joined the competition and how she feels about her spur of the moment decision. Her motivations throughout the novel are so extremely murky. Dodge's motivations are a little clearer, but not as much as I would've wanted them to be. His main idea is to seek revenge for the life-altering injuries caused to his sister in a former Panic competition. I just wish his relationship with his sister had been a little more evident and strong at times, so his motivations seemed a little more rational. The scenes the two characters had together seemed lacking and their relationship wasn't as developed as I may have liked it to be.

The other huge issue I had with this book was the game of Panic itself. I was expecting this book to be fuelled by near-death experiences, and crazy suspense and twists but that wasn't the story we received at all. It was fuelled more by teenage drama and antics than I would've liked. Maybe had the relationships with the characters had been stronger this would've been easier to comprehend, but Nat and Dodge's "relationship" was more prevalent in this story than the game itself. The book was not nearly focused enough on the game itself as I would've wanted it to be. It ended up being focused on underdeveloped subplots such as Heather and her sister's relationship with their mother, and the relationships the friend group itself had-- not to mention Dodge never talked to these people the day before he met them and suddenly they are all chummy chummy? Like what? If the characters themselves weren't so FREAKING flat maybe this would've been a decent character-driven story built on the relationships the characters had, and how that influenced their Panic decisions which wasn't exactly what I wanted, but it would've been decent nonetheless) all would be right in the world but that's not what we got, was it?

Bottom line: I should've listened to all the negative reviews...

After reading Delirium, I was really disappointed in this book. It felt like a lot of details were missed, that Lauren Oliver knew what was going on in her head but forgot to write it for the reader. Also, I felt details didn't add up. If Panic is illegal, then why/how are students forced to give $1/day while in school "or else?"

This was a quick, on the edge read.
With just the right amount of suspense, drama and romance to keep you wanting.

I just couldn't put it down, juat had to know.

Lauren is a brilliant author with a love for romance gone wrong.

So good! I downloaded the ebook from the library when I found it on the 'most popular' list and read an excerpt. Gives great insight into how group think happens and how fear affects our lives

Lately my type of book has involved Supernatural abilities of some sort. So I was pleasantly surprised when I picked this one up and the summary did not mention anything supernatural, but I was still compelled to read it. This is a great book. Lots of interesting characters and the best part for me at least was the challenges. They are described perfectly and got my heart racing and I wasn't even there.

I literally was reading this book till 12: 30 in the morning... I just honestly couldn't put it down!!! I love this book and everything about it!! ♡♥♡ I wish the story wasn't over.

It was good, but it wasn’t my favorite. The characters were kinda annoying, and there wasn’t much of a plot. However, their were some good aspects like the fact the challenges kept you on edge. I also wanted to finish the read because I did want to find out what happens. Overall It was good and a good summer read!
adventurous fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Very enjoyable! Another fun, exciting and easy-breezy read by Lauren Oliver. Leaning towards 3.5 stars... wasn't quite a 4 star read. A bit predictable at times--I totally saw the big reveal coming a mile away. The ending was a bit of a let down from all the buildup and a little too tidy/rushed for my taste (seems to be a theme with her writing)--BUT still satisfying nonetheless.

Very great book
Different to most books that I read