The Death Cure

The Death Cure

First edition cover
Author James Dashner
Cover artist Philip Straub
Country United States
Language English
Series The Maze Runner Trilogy
Genre young-adult, dystopia, science fiction
Published 2011, Delacorte Press
Media type Print, ebook, audiobook
Pages 325
ISBN 978-0-385-73877-4
OCLC 698332724
Preceded by The Scorch Trials

The Death Cure is a 2011 young-adult dystopian science fiction novel by James Dashner and the third book in the Maze Runner Series.[1] It was first published in hardback on October 11, 2011 through Delacorte Press and was preceded by The Maze Runner and The Scorch Trials and followed by the series prequel, The Kill Order.

Plot

The protagonist, Thomas, is held in solitary confinement, but is eventually released by Assistant Director Janson, also known as Rat Man by the gladers, who tells the Gladers and Group B that there is a cure for the Flare (a deadly disease). Many of those present were immune to the Flare while some were not, and escaping would serve no purpose, for people in the outside world despise the Immunes. The Gladers are offered the chance to restore their memories and remove the controllers in their heads. Without the devices, Thomas, Teresa and Aris will no longer be able to communicate telepathically. Thomas, Minho and Newt were the only ones to choose not to undergo the procedure, but Janson later attempts to force them into the process, because he feels they will be no help to finding the cure if they don't get their memories back. All three of them escape before having chips removed, with the help of Brenda and Jorge, who are revealed to be working for WICKED and were sent to the Scorch as an assignment. Thomas feels betrayed, but Brenda convinces him she had no choice and most of her behavior was not a deception, and Thomas forgives her. Soon afterward, the Gladers discover everyone who had undergone the restoration procedure had abandoned them; Newt gives Thomas a note and tells him to open it "when the time is right".

The five of them then go to Denver looking for a man called Hans who can take out Thomas, Minho and Newt's mind controlling chips, and for the other Gladers who also came to Denver. Newt is unable to continue, as he is infected with the Flare, as are the rest in the Berg. In the airport, a black-suited man directs them to an address. Waiting for them is Gally, who has joined a group called the right arm , and is determined to put an end to the trials and experiments. He tells them WICKED is capturing every Immune they can find to prepare another cycle of the Trials. Gally also reveals the decaying cities are home to many who suffer from the Flare, but partake of a drug called the Bliss, which slows its progression.

Thomas and his friends find Hans, and he removes Minho and Thomas' control chips, though Thomas is uncontrollably forced to resist; Brenda, Jorge and Minho have to hold him down in order for Hans to perform the surgery on Thomas. They visit a café, where a man is found to be partaking of Bliss and captured by security, and Thomas is captured by the guard, who wants to give him to bounty hunters, who will end up giving him to WICKED. Janson, in a holographic form, uses a police vehicle to rescue Thomas and tells him he must return to WICKED to save Newt. Minho, Thomas, Brenda and Jorge return to the Berg and find a note: Newt has been taken to the Cranks. Minho convinces the four of them to go to the Crank Palace in a rescue attempt, and they meet Newt after bribing the guards. Newt angrily tells them to leave, and the Cranks chase them out. Thomas remembers the note Newt gave him and reads it to find Newt had implored Thomas to kill him. Thomas despairs about not having read the note earlier, but the four end up going back to Denver.

In Denver, they discover that Teresa and the other Immunes were all captured. Thomas and Minho knock out the guards and threaten to shoot their toes if they don't take him to their leader. Thomas and Brenda discover the "leader" is actually the Right Arm's leader, Vince. Vince tells them they are copying WICKED's design and plan to take over their headquarters building. On his way to the Right Arm's Bergs, Thomas sees Newt with a group of cranks taking over Denver. With a pistol in his pocket, Thomas tries to convince Newt to come with him, but Newt begs for death, and Thomas eventually ends up killing his friend.

Working for the Right Arm, Thomas arrives at WICKED's headquarters and discovers Janson intends to complete the cure by examining Thomas's physical brain structurean act that will result in his death. Thomas is able to plant a device that disables all of WICKED's weapons, but is forced to begin the deadly brain surgery as the Right Arm begins storming the facility. Thomas wakes up to find himself not dead after all and finds a note from the Chancellor of WICKED; it reveals they already have enough resources to build the blueprint for the cure from the Trials and his brain is not needed, but that some WICKED staff did not believe suchthere has been a split. It also reveals the location of the Immunes the Right Arm "sold" to WICKED to gain access, and a "safe place" where Thomas should take them all. Thomas and his friends re-enter the Maze to find WICKED's captured Immunes. They quickly learn the Right Arm does not intend to occupy WICKED headquartersthey intend to destroy it. Explosions rock the Maze, while giant rocks splash down, killing some Immunes within. The Grievers come out, but Teresa shows Thomas how to manually shut them down. Returning to the outside world, Thomas is almost trapped by a piece of falling debris on the way to the Flat Trans that takes them to the promised "safe place". Teresa pushes him out of the way, but dies in Thomas' place. The survivors finally make it through the portal to a lush paradise. Thomas, Minho, Gally, Frypan, Clint and other survivors of Group A survived. Aris, Harriet, Sonya and a few others of Group B also survived the third and final trial; Brenda and Jorge had also survived.

The epilogue reveals the Flare was deliberately engineered and released by the government as a form of population control after the sun flares, but escalated beyond control, and WICKED was unable to find a cure. The Chancellor realizes the Immunes were their only hope from the beginning; while the world will crumble, the remaining Immunes will rebuild society and restore the human race. This, she claims, is the reason "WICKED is good."

Characters

Reception

Critical reception for The Death Cure was mixed.[2][3] Commonsensemedia gave the book three stars, commenting that the book's oppressiveness kept it from being more memorable than they wanted it to be.[4] The Deseret News also commented on the book's bleak nature, but praised it as being "both conclusive and satisfying".[5] The Horn Book Guide and Kirkus Reviews both gave positive reviews, with the Horn Book Guide opining that the book's conclusion was "thought-provoking".[6][7]

Film adaptation

Maze Runner: The Death Cure will be released on February 17, 2017. Wes Ball confirmed that, if he returns to direct, the film will not be split into two films.[8] In March 2015, T.S. Nowlin was confirmed to write the script.[9] On July 9, 2015, it was revealed that filming is set to begin in February 2016.[10] On September 16, 2015, it was confirmed that Ball would return to direct the third film.[11] The film began principle photography on March 14, 2016 in Cache Creek, British Columbia. On March 19, 2016, Maze Runner: The Death Cure star Dylan O'Brien was critically injured on-set when he was struck by a car during a stunt sequence.[12] On March 20, 2016, director Wes Ball announced production was shut down to allow O'Brien time to recuperate from his injuries.

References

  1. "The Death Cure (review)". Booklist. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  2. "Book Review: 'The Death Cure' by James Dashner". Jacksonville.com. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  3. "The Death Cure (review)". Library Journal (Book Verdict). Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  4. "The Death Cure: Maze Runner Trilogy, Book 3 (review)". Commonsensemedia. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  5. Ellsworth, Emily. "Book review: 'The Death Cure' is an action packed conclusion to 'The Maze Runner' series". Deseret News. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  6. "The Death Cure (review)". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  7. Ribay, Randy (Spring 2012). "The Death Cure (review)". The Horn Book Guide 23 (1): 94. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  8. Sciretta, Peter (October 9, 2014). "‘The Maze Runner’ Finale ‘The Death Cure’ Won’t Be Split Into Two Movies". /Film. Retrieved October 24, 2014.
  9. Busch, Anita. "‘Maze Runner: The Death Cure’ Sets T.S. Nowlin To Pen". Deadline.com. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  10. ClevverTV [ClevverTV] (July 9, 2015). "The script for Death Cure is currently being worked on & will begin filming in February #ScorchTrials #ScorchSneakPeek" (Tweet). Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  11. McNary, Dave; Chi, Paul (September 16, 2015). "Wes Ball Returning to Direct Third ‘Maze Runner’". Variety. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  12. "ET Canada | Blog - UPDATE: 'Maze Runner' Director On Injured Star Dylan O'Brien: 'He Is One Tough Cookie'". etcanada. Retrieved 2016-03-21.

External links

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