We start the book in a small dark room, where our protagonist wakes up with no memory but his name, Thomas. The door opens and he is greeted by a bunch of teenage boys who are not very helpful in providing any details of his situation. He is in what the other boys call the Glade, an area of several acres that contains a farm/slaughter house, gardens, a small forest/graveyard, and a ramshackle house called the Homestead. The whole thing is contained by massive walls with giant gaps on all four sides. Thomas is assigned to Chuck who until Thomas's arrival was the newest boy. Chuck informs him that a new boy is brought to the Glade every 30 days without fail. That night Thomas witnesses the walls closing, completely sealing the boys in the Glade. He finds out that outside the walls is the Maze, which the boys hope by
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back to the Glade everybody is astonished and Thomas is made a Runner. Albie gets the serum and goes through the Change. When he wakes up he tries to tell Thomas some of his memories but is prevented by some mysterious force. The girl starts talking telepathically to Thomas while still in a coma, telling him that she has initiated the ending...whatever that means. She wakes up and tells him her name is Teresa and that she remembers that the Maze is a code. Everybody is mistrustful of the girl, especially since what ever she triggered caused the doors of the wall to remain open after nightfall, allowing the Grievers to come into the Glade. Gally comes back and tells everybody that the Grievers are going to kill one person a night until it is all over and then sacrifices himself to the Grievers who then leave until the next night. Knowing that he has the memories of how to end this stuck in his head, Thomas intentionally gets stung by a Griever and goes through the Change. He comes back and tells everybody that he and Teresa were forced by scientists to help create the Glade and the Maze, that there telepathic link made them very special somehow. The scientist were then got tired of the experiment after a couple of years and dumped Thomas and Teresa into the Maze to finish it up. They figure out that the shifting Maze is actually a code that needs to be input into a computer that is hidden in an optical illusion of the edge of a cliff. The gang fights there way through the Grievers, losing most of the boys and finally make it to the outside. In a supposed final test Chuck is killed by a zombie Gally? Maybe? Not quit sure what happened there, but it did. The remaining boys and Teresa are rescued by a group claiming that they are against this type of cruel testing and explain the current state of things. A super sun flare fried a good chunk of Earth the same time a plague, called The Flare started ravaging the remaining humans. The boys were put into the Glade to see who would not give up looking for a solution, even when there was no solution (yeah doesn't make sense to me either).
Apparently they were looking for a group of boys who would be able to keep up the search for a cure for the Flare, not because they were smart, or had medical inclinations, or any sort of training, but because they kept looking for an impossible solution...even though there wasn't one. Anyways the scientists got sick of waiting for the boys to not give up on finding a solution, even though they claimed there wasn't one, even though there obviously was one 'cause they found it, but that wasn't the point so they sent Thomas and Teresa in to finish it up...to prove who knows what. The boys and Teresa are put into separate rooms for the night and told they will be completely filled in the next day. The book ends with a memo from one scientist to another, stating that the fake rescue went off without a hitch and they are looking forward to the next phase of testing.
If you actually read through that whole long synopsis you may have gotten the vibe that a few things did not work for me :-) I think the hardest part for me to swallow was the premise of the whole experiment, which was to find boys who would not give up looking for a solution, even though they kept saying there was no solution...but there was a solution because they used it to get out in the end. There was a lot of contradictory information like that in the book, which to me takes away some of its credibility. My other big issue was that essentially the whole book was about these two kids (Thomas and Teresa) who get dumped into this
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What is your biggest pet peeve in reading? Have you ever read a book that is page turning and not so great all at the same time? Do you love how my ramblings are almost as long as the book?
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