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Original Title: Gone
ISBN: 1416979182 (ISBN13: 9781416979180)
Edition Language: English
Series: Wake #3
Characters: Janie Hannagan, Cabel Strumheller
Literary Awards: Goodreads Choice Award Nominee for Goodreads Author (2010)
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Gone (Wake #3) Hardcover | Pages: 214 pages
Rating: 3.72 | 27739 Users | 1966 Reviews

Particularize Of Books Gone (Wake #3)

Title:Gone (Wake #3)
Author:Lisa McMann
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 214 pages
Published:February 9th 2010 by Simon Pulse
Categories:Young Adult. Fantasy. Paranormal. Romance

Narration Supposing Books Gone (Wake #3)

There is an alternate cover edition for this ISBN13 here. Things should be great for Janie—she has graduated from high school and is spending her summer with Cabel, the guy she’s totally in love with. But deep down she’s panicking about how she’s going to survive her future when getting sucked into other people’s dreams is really starting to take its toll. Things get even more complicated when she meets her father for the very first time—and he’s in a coma. As Janie uncovers his secret past, she begins to realize that the choice thought she had has more dire consequences than she ever imagined.

Rating Of Books Gone (Wake #3)
Ratings: 3.72 From 27739 Users | 1966 Reviews

Criticize Of Books Gone (Wake #3)
Great ending to a terrific series.This final story about Janie, the dreamcatcher, and Cabel, the boy who loves her, doesn't disappoint. This one doesn't have the crime plotline of the first two books, but instead deals with the mystery of Janie's past and future. Her choices are even more devastating than she thought they were and she perpares to make heartbreaking choices.We get to know a little about Janie's father and small bits about her mother as well. The time stamps on each section works

Now, I'm not saying that length and quality are completely connected. (they're definitely not) All I am saying here is that the entire Dream Catcher series is shorter than many adult novels and is half the length of some middle grade series. There just isn't much going on--and there wasn't enough substance for me. Sure, I enjoyed the writing. Sure, I thought the story was interesting. But when it came to writing a review, I felt like there just wasn't enough. This series is the first where I

I'm finding it to be more and more common for YA series to end poorly. It seems like Lisa McMann, like a few other authors, got sloppy by the third book and stopped trying, because she knew that anyone who loved the first 2 books, would automatically want to read this one! Well, don't waste your time! I suggest reading some of the spoiler reviews instead.The concept was there.. but it was the kind of book that I wanted to skim through to get to the point. This book has WAY too much "poor me.. my

This is definately my favorite in the series. With every book I felt that hole of despair building in my chest, only to never actually break. While each book was a good fast read, it just never seemed to take that leap that I needed. The tears just never quite made it. And then......Yep yep thats right I CRIED!!! I finally broke, and I welcomed every tear.This book just seemed to go a little deeper. While the first two stayed relitively close to the surface, this one dived straight down. The

This is one of the strangest trilogies I've read! Almost seems like each book in the trilogy is from a different genre, though each has the same main characters and core situations. The first book is like a paranormal/fantasy romance, the second a detective thriller, and the third is like a teen social issues book. I didn't like the third book as much as the other two (I liked the first one best), though I still read it in record time. Kind of a maudlin and depressing book, dealing more with

3.5 ⭐

If you look at the number of ratings Lisa McMann's books have, it's really not fair of me to call her underrated, but that's just what I'm going to do. I rarely see her books discussed or even reviewed by my blogger friends, which is a shame because I have a soft spot for them. Not just the books in this series, but those in her Visions series, too. She has a very unusual writing style - fragments are frequently used, language is at its bare minimum, dialogue is crisp and effortless. It may take

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