Basically it’s a culmination of the revolution that started in Breathe. We get another POV in this book, in the form of the pod minister’s son Ronan, who is disgusted by his father’s actions. Here, all of them are separated – Alina and others from Grove are heading to Sequoia and Quinn and Bea along with Jazz are following them. In comparison to Breathe, Resist did better than it’s prequel. Sarah Crossan has created a dangerous, and shattered society in this wrenching, thought-provoking, and unforgettable post-apocalyptic novel. When the future of human society is in danger, these four teens must decide where their allegiances lie. Their only chance is to stand together, even when terrible circumstances force them apart. Can they survive in the perilous Outlands? Can they finish the revolution they began? Especially when a young operative from the pod's Special Forces is sent after them. They started a rebellion and were thrown out of the pod, the only place where there's enough oxygen to breathe. Gripping action, provocative ideas, and shocking revelations in a dystopian novel that fans of Patrick Ness and Veronica Roth will devour.īea, Alina, and Quinn are on the run. Three teen outlaws must survive on their own in a world without air, exiled outside the glass dome that protects what's left of human civilization. The sequel-and conclusion-to Sarah Crossan's Breathe.
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