
I would definitely recommend this series. I loved many of these characters and it was sometimes tough to read about the things they went through. I think Crouch did an exceptional job over the course of these three books building out this world and providing characters that the Reader could care about. I wouldn’t have guessed the ending and I can’t argue with it. Overall, I am satisfied with this ending. I mean I could feel it, watching the percentage run down on my kindle. 21 cm 'Secret service agent Ethan Burke arrives in Wayward Pines, Idaho, with a clear mission: locate and recover two federal agents who went missing in the bucolic town one month earlier. How the heck are they going to get out of this? For the majority of the book, I felt pretty helpless with regards to my favorite characters. It’s dropping you off directly where the action left off. This installment was non-stop action from the very start. He’s about to unleash a community-wide shitstorm, pretty much the equivalent of a 10-year old flipping over a game of Monopoly because they’re losing.


Much, much worse.Įthan Burke has ticked off Pilcher and that results in Pilcher cranking up for a temper tantrum of epic proportions. The truth of Wayward Pines, even the idea of it, is so horrifying that it is seared into my brain from now until forevermore.Īfter the reveals of the second book, which had huge repercussions for the entire town, things get much worse. Luckily for me, this is a very memorable story, so I had no problem picking this one up even though almost a year had passed.

Sometimes when things are so good, you just don’t want them to end. I read the first two books last Fall, but for some reason, as often happens, I then failed to pick this one up. The Last Town is the concluding book in Blake Crouch’s Wayward Pines series. Wayward Pines, Idaho, is quintessential small-town America-or so it seems.
