
Oddly enough I remembered a lot more from Ashes (Book #1) but I think that’s because I loved that one soo much, and often the books we love never leave our memories. Though that could largely be due to the fact that unfortunately I read Shadows (Book #2) so long ago it was difficult to remember parts of why certain things were happening in this book. ***WARNING! IF YOU HAVE NOT READ BOTH ASHES (BOOK #1) AND SHADOWS (BOOK #2) DO NOT READ ANY FURTHER!!! THERE WILL BE SPOILERS ON THE FIRST TWO BOOKS AHEAD!***Īlright, so there were many many pros to Monsters, yet there were some significant cons. I will also be placing the links to buy them off Amazon and Barnes&Noble in this post.

So I will just say do yourself the best favor and read books one and two of the Ashes Trilogy, they are titled Ashes and Shadows. I started reading the Ashes trilogy almost a year ago so it was before I started this blog, so I’m only going to review book three because it is the freshest in my mind and I’m afraid that if I were to review the other two I wouldn’t do them justice. Bick delivers a riveting, blockbuster finish, returning readers to a brutal, post-apocalyptic world where no one is safe and hope is in short supply.Ī world where, from these ashes, the monsters may rise.

With this final volume of The Ashes Trilogy, Ilsa J. Now, with no hope of rescue-on the brink of starvation in a winter that just won’t quit-she discovers a new and horrifying truth. But then the end of the world happened, and Alex took the first step down a treacherous road of betrayal and terror and death.

She headed into the wilderness as a good-bye, to leave everything behind. When her parents died, Alex thought things couldn’t get much worse-until the doctors found the monster in her head.
