Delirium Series

Follows Lena and Alex, two teens battling against the controlling government that believes that love is a disease and forbids it from their community.

Ninety-five days, and then I'll be safe. I wonder whether the procedure will hurt. I want to get it over with. It's hard to be patient. It's hard not to be afraid while I'm still uncured, though so far the deliria hasn't touched me yet. Still, I worry. They say that in the old days, love drove people to madness. The deadliest of all deadly things: It kills you both when you have it and when you don't


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Well, maybe this:
Have you ever read a book so beautiful it physically hurts? A book that has you
laughing one moment, crying the next? A book that makes you feel every single emotion the character does?

Delirium is that book.

As I read, I found my eyes were prickling with tears, even as I felt like smiling at some little thing in the plot. It's left me with an ache, a longing, a need for the next in the series. I have to know what happens.

Someone said that they mourned this book once they'd finished, and I finally
understand why.

I'm not sure how to explain everything Delirium made me feel. All I can say is that all the emotions Lena felt, I felt. And, more importantly, they all felt real, like they were my own.

The whole world is extraordinary: Love is a disease: amor delirium nervosa. It's something that has to be cured, eradicated: it's forbidden. Everything is set for you as well – the government decides everything. They choose, jobs, partners, whole lives, and you get no say. It's a horrible world. No love, parents without emotions, no love for their children, some even killing them. There are raids, regulators, phone taps, always searching for the same thing: sympathizers, Invalids, love. And worse: you're trapped. There's America, and then there's the Wilds, where sympathizers flee to, and Invalids live. And it's just the fact that being in love, having feelings, makes you an "Invalid" that gets to me. I said it before and I'll say it again: horrible.

And the characters were absolutely unforgettable. The book is told from Lena's
point of view, and I have to say the writing was beautiful. Lena started out as a good, perfect citizen, before slowly turning around into a rebel, breaking every rule. She was told from a young girl that without love, you'll be safe, there will be no pain, and she longed for the day she'd be cured. But then, she began to realize the truth, and I really liked seeing how love changed everything for her, how she grew as a character.

She's so strong and brave – especially compared to how she was at the beginning – and by the end I loved her. Her past was intriguing as well, and it was something that had weighed down on her for all her life. It was pure genius from Lauren Oliver how she let everything slowly unfold, and I didn't see any of it coming. The way Lena looks at everything was interesting as well. After all, in a world where 'love' is a killable offence; everything is completely different, and far more dangerous.

Alex... I fell in love with him. Of all the characters, he was the one that really jumped out at me. He was amazing, strong, beautiful, perfect. And his past was even more fascinating than Lena's was – so much so that I found myself racing to find out more about him – about everyone. The love between him and Lena was stunning and pure: real. The bond between them was just incredible, and so beautiful. I honestly believed in their love, unlike the romance in a lot of YA books nowadays.

I have to mention Lena's best-friend Hana: she was truly the best friend a girl could ever have. I loved her sense of humour, her bravery, her loyalty. She'd do anything for Hana, and was even better for it. I think she must have been the one that made me laugh most.

Delirium was another emotional-rollercoaster, and so compelling I was up until three-something in the morning just so I could get to the end and know what would happen. Plus, the whole world was amazing, and so imaginative it's untrue. A place without love? Who else has thought of that, who else has thought to use love as a disease? "The deadliest of all deadly things: It kills you both when you have it when you don't." No book I've ever read has spoken of love like that. It was so new, so unusual, so horrible, so real. I cried so much during this book; the writing was so full of emotions it was almost overwhelming, but in a good way. The pace is perfect, the suspense grew with every chapter, and I literally sped through the book at break-neck speed.

I must have felt everything possible reading Delirium: love, fear, devastating sadness, chills, shock, scenes that were so touching I know they're going to stay in my mind for a long time.

This whole book will stay with me, actually, and so will the characters. I'm praying for the next in the series, and am going to be counting down the days until it comes out. This is an amazing book that I honestly can't recommend enough. This is a book for a "Have To Read" list.


Author: Lauren Oliver



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