By the time the first film adaptation of The Maze Runner was released, I wasn’t reading young adult novels anymore. After finishing The Hunger Games trilogy in high school, my interest in reading post-apocalyptic trilogies about teenagers fighting the “system” had dropped. It wasn’t even because I had the mentality of “if you’ve read one, you’ve read them all” about them; I just didn’t care. I had grown out of them by that point, focusing more on college and stories that didn’t rely on love triangles, teenagers killing teenagers, and the usual post-apocalyptic fare as heavily as those typically did. It also didn’t help that seeing the
Maze Runner: The Death Cure
Maze Runner: The Death Cure
Maze Runner: The Death Cure
By the time the first film adaptation of The Maze Runner was released, I wasn’t reading young adult novels anymore. After finishing The Hunger Games trilogy in high school, my interest in reading post-apocalyptic trilogies about teenagers fighting the “system” had dropped. It wasn’t even because I had the mentality of “if you’ve read one, you’ve read them all” about them; I just didn’t care. I had grown out of them by that point, focusing more on college and stories that didn’t rely on love triangles, teenagers killing teenagers, and the usual post-apocalyptic fare as heavily as those typically did. It also didn’t help that seeing the