The Maze Runner (book series)

The Maze Runner
The author James Dashner at Comicon in 2014


AuthorJames Dashner
Cover artistPhilip Straub, Dennis Louis
CountryUnited States, Australia, Canada, France
LanguageEnglish, French
GenreAdventure
Science fiction
Dystopian
Young adult fiction
PublisherDelacorte Press
Published2009-Present
Media typePrint (hardcover and paperback), audiobook, e-book
No. of books6 (Books) 3 (Companion)

The Maze Runner is a series of young adult dystopian science fiction novels written by American author James Dashner.[1][2] The series consists of The Maze Runner (2009), The Scorch Trials (2010) and The Death Cure (2011), as well as two prequel novels, The Kill Order (2012) and The Fever Code (2016), a novella titled Crank Palace (2020), and a companion book titled The Maze Runner Files (2013).[1] The sixth novel, titled The Maze Cutter, set 73 years following the events of The Death Cure, was released on October 4, 2022.[3][4][5]

The series, revealing details in non-chronological order, tells how the world was devastated by a series of massive solar flares and coronal mass ejections.

Novels

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Title Pages Chapters Words Released Audio
1 The Maze Runner 372 62 101,182 October 2009 10h 50m
2 The Scorch Trials 361 65 96,869 September 2010 10h 53m
3 The Death Cure 325 73 87,385 October 2011 8h 55m
4 The Kill Order 384 69 86,710 August 2012 9h 58m
5 The Fever Code 347 64 86,565 September 2016 9h 57m
6 The Maze Cutter 328 16 November 2022 8h 47m
7 The Godhead Complex 272 25 November 2023
Totals 2,389 374 458,711 59h 20m

The Maze Runner

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The Maze Runner is the first book in the series and was released on October 6, 2009.

A group of teenagers, who call themselves "Gladers", are left in a strange place which they call the "Glade". The Glade is surrounded by four doors, leading to the Maze, that close every night at sundown and open in the morning. The Glade consists of multiple buildings including a homestead, map room, and "the slammer" which functions as a makeshift jail. It also consists of areas such as the "deadheads" (where the dead Gladers are buried), the animal pens, and a tree grove.[6] Beyond the walls of the Glade is the ever-changing Maze, populated by horrifying, biomechanical creatures, called Grievers. Every month, a newcomer, nicknamed "Greenie", joins the Gladers, sent by a lift they call the Box. Each newcomer has all memories (except language and other common things) wiped out. The only thing that they remember is their name. They are watched by mechanical beetles, called 'beetle blades' which belong to their 'creators'. Each beetle blade has the word "WICKED" stamped across its back. The ultimate goal of the Gladers is to find a way out of the Maze. To do so, certain Gladers called "Runners" venture into the Maze every day, to map it in an attempt to find a pattern in the Maze that would lead them to find an exit. The main character, Thomas, arrives at the Glade. Shortly thereafter, a girl (Teresa) is sent up through the Box, arriving in a coma, and bringing the message: Everything is going to change. She bears a note saying "She's the last one. Ever." Thomas becomes an object of reverence, suspicion, and great curiosity to the Gladers due to his ties to all of the strange happenings in the Glade, fueled greatly after he becomes the first to survive a night inside the Maze. Together with new friends, such as Chuck (the second-newest newbie), Newt (second in command of the Gladers), and Minho (Keeper of the Runners), he begins to solve the mystery of the Maze and search for a way out. Thomas leads his group to make it out of the maze find a way back home and defeat WICKED.

The Scorch Trials

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The Scorch Trials is the second book released in the series, on September 18, 2010.

The Gladers thought that getting through The Maze was it. They were wrong. The Maze was only the beginning, and now WICKED demands they undergo the Scorch Trials, in which they must cross The Scorch——a barren wasteland left burned and scarred by violent sun flares. What's worse, the denizens of The Scorch are being consumed by an infection known as The Flare, corrupting their very minds until they lose all that makes them human. The game is set again, and WICKED controls the board, but if the Gladers want another chance at freedom, they must play WICKED's game and survive The Scorch Trials.

The Death Cure

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The Death Cure is the third book released in the series, on October 11, 2011.

In the third book of "The Maze Runner" Series, Thomas is locked up in solitary confinement for four weeks. Upon his release, Assistant Director Janson (Rat Man) reveals to him and the other subjects (including Group B) that there is no cure for the Flare, but that most of the Gladers and Group B are immune. He warns them that many people in the outside world hate them because of their unnatural resistance to the Flare, and that if they escape they will most likely be in more danger. Later, all Gladers and Group B members' memories are restored and they escape. Thomas, Newt, and Minho refuse restoration and they later escape with Jorge and Brenda. They then go to a city and have WICKED's devices in their brains disabled. They join forces with "Right Arm", an organization fighting against WICKED. The moral may be that cooperation and working as a team is the most important factor.

The Kill Order

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The Kill Order is the fourth book released in the series, on August 14, 2012. It is the first novel in narrative order, set prior to the events of The Fever Code and 13 years before the events in The Maze Runner.[7] It is followed in narrative order by The Fever Code.

Of the novel, Dashner stated that he wanted to expand the world, but not focus on the main characters of the main Maze Runner trilogy.[8] He also stated that he had originally planned to write a prequel for the series, but that the plans did not become official until he had completed the third book in the trilogy.[9]

Before WICKED is formed, before the Glade is built, and before Thomas enters the Maze, solar flares hit the earth and mankind was ravaged by disease. Mark and Trina were there when it happened, and survived. Now a disease of rage and lunacy races across the eastern United States, and there's something suspicious about its origin and it's mutating, and all evidence suggests that it will bring humanity to its knees. Mark and Trina are convinced there's a way to save those left living from descending into madness.[citation needed]

The Fever Code

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The Fever Code is the fifth book released in the series, on September 27, 2016. It is the second prequel and the fifth installment of The Maze Runner series. It is the second book in narrative order, preceded by The Kill Order and followed by The Maze Runner.

The book is set in between the events of The Kill Order and immediately before The Maze Runner. The novel is written from the various points of view of "The Gladers". The book primarily focuses on the training that Thomas and the others undergo before being sent into the Maze, however, it also explores the relationships between the Gladers before they underwent "the Swipe" that suppressed their memories, describes "the Purge" that is briefly mentioned in The Death Cure, and the lives of the Gladers before Thomas' insertion into the Maze, since during the events in the book he is working for WICKED. This book gives a background of the series, providing the reader with information they have been asking themselves. The book ends with the final moments before Thomas enters the Boox, when he is betrayed and sent into the Maze at the beginning of The Maze Runner.

The Maze Cutter series

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The Maze Cutter

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The Maze Cutter is the first book of a spin-off trilogy to The Maze Runner series. It was published on October 4, 2022, and on November 1, 2022, in North America. It is centered around the descendants of the Gladers, who encounter a ship from the mainland 73 years after the events of The Death Cure.

The Godhead Complex

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The Godhead Complex is the second book in The Maze Cutter spin-off trilogy. It was published in 2023. [10]

Other releases

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The Maze Runner Files

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The Maze Runner Files is a companion book to The Maze Runner series. It was released on 1 January 2013 as an e-book and is 50 pages long. The book is divided into three parts: Confidential Files, Recovered Correspondence, and Suppressed Memories.

It contains information about the Flare, a disease caused because of a man-made disaster. WICKED and some of the Gladers. It also reveals events such as Thomas and Teresa's first conversation, Minho's Phase Three Trial, Frypan's past, e-mails between WICKED correspondents, and more.

Crank Palace

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Crank Palace is a novella, released on August 25, 2020. The story is centered on the character Newt and takes place during the events of The Death Cure. It was first released as an audiobook on August 25, 2020, while the print copy and ebook version was released on November 23 of the same year.

Characters

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  • Thomas (books 1–3, 5, minor appearance in book 4) is one of the creators of the Maze along with Teresa Agnes, and later a Group A Glader in books 1–3. He is the main protagonist of the series, named after Thomas Edison. Thomas's name was Stephen before WICKED took him from his mother. His subject number is A2, and his title is "to be killed by Group B".[11]
  • Teresa Agnes (books 1–5) is a Group A Glader and a creator of the Maze with Thomas, named after Mother Teresa. She appears in book 4 under her original name Deedee. Her subject number is A1, and her title is "the betrayer".
  • Newt (books 1–3, 5–6) is a British Group A Glader and Alby's second-in-command. He has a slight limp from attempting suicide when he was a Runner. Newt is named after Sir Isaac Newton. He is the brother of Sonya, a girl in Group B, who he called Lizzy. His subject number is A5, and his title is "the glue".[12]
  • Minho (books 1–3, 5) is an Asian Group A Glader and Keeper of the Runners. He later became Leader of the Gladers in the Scorch. Instead of being named after someone historically famous, he is named after James Dashner's niece's Korean husband. His subject number is A7, and his title is "the leader".
  • Gally (books 1, 3, 5) is a Group A Glader who was Thomas's first enemy in the Glade. He serves as the main antagonist for Thomas in the first book, however, after being presumed dead for the second book, comes back to become an ally in the third. Gally is named after Galileo Galilei. His subject number is A9.
  • Alby (book 1, 5) is the first-in-command and leader of the Gladers. He is named after Albert Einstein. His subject number is A6.
  • Chuck (book 1, 5, mentioned in 2–3) is a Group A Glader who befriended Thomas in the Maze. He is Thomas' best friend. Chuck is named after Charles Darwin. His subject number is A4.
  • Frypan (books 1–3, 5-6) is the former Keeper of the Cooks for Group A. He is named after Sigmund Freud. His original name was Toby before being taken by WICKED. His subject number is A3.
  • Winston (books 1–2, mentioned in 3, 5) is the former keeper of the slices for Group A. Winston is either named after Robert Winston or Winston Churchill. He was presumed to be killed by a lightning storm in the scorch trials. His subject number is A13.
  • Chancellor Ava Paige (books 1–3, 5) is the highest-ranking official of WICKED. She initially opposed the use of Immunes for the Trials and also was one of the two people to oppose Thomas' death. However, she infected Chancellor Anderson with the Flare and forced Thomas into the Maze after Chancellor Anderson proposed to end the trials after the Maze Trials were finished. All epilogues of the three books consist of an e-mail written by Dr. Paige to her associates.
  • Assistant Director Janson (books 2–3) nicknamed Rat Man in book 2, is the highest-ranking official in WICKED after Chancellor Paige.
  • Jorge (books 2–3, 5) is a pilot for WICKED; he is later assigned by WICKED to work undercover as the leader of a group of Cranks in the Scorch.
  • Brenda (books 2–3, 5) is a character that the members of Group A and B assumed to be a Crank. Eventually, they discover that she is an Immune.
  • Aris Jones (books 2–3, 5) is the only male member in a group of female teenagers called Group B. He is named after Aristotle. His subject number is B1, and his title is "the partner".
  • Rachel (mentioned in book 2, 5) is a member of Group B and the best friend of Aris Jones, with whom she had a telepathic connection. Her subject number is B2.
  • Harriet (books 2–3) is one of the leaders of Group B. She is named after Harriet Tubman. Her subject number is B3.
  • Sonya (books 2–3, 5) is one of the leaders of Group B along with Harriet, in the Group B Maze. She is the younger sister of Newt. Her name was originally Elizabeth; Newt calls her Lizzy. Her subject number is B5.[13]
  • Mark (book 4) is the main protagonist of The Kill Order. He survived the catastrophic solar flares and escaped to the Appalachians. He is Trina's love interest and committed suicide by telling Alec to fly the Berg into the building, killing them all, except Deedee, after succumbing to the Flare.
  • Alec (book 4) is a veteran and a U.S. military pilot. He survived the solar flares to become one of the protagonists in The Kill Order.
  • Trina (book 4) is one of the protagonists in The Kill Order. She was also the love interest of Mark.
  • Lana (book 4) is a former military nurse and is one of the protagonists who survived the solar flares in The Kill Order. She was killed by Alec after Cranks fatally injured her.

Critical reception

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Book retailer Barnes & Noble included The Maze Runner book as part of its showcasing of new writers for the end of 2009 and the beginning of 2010. Kirkus Reviews wrote, "Hard to put down, this is clearly just a first installment, and it will leave readers dying to find out what comes next".

Jessica Harrison of the Deseret Morning News labeled The Maze Runner as "a thrilling adventurous book for kids ages 13+ that will get readers' hearts pumping and leave them asking for more." She noted that it "starts out a bit slow" but as it matched Thomas's confusion and picked up pace as he became more accustomed, she wrote that "it's almost as if Dashner is easing the reader into what becomes a fast-paced, nonstop action." However, she thought the "only drawback" was the "fictionalized slang" that although it "feels realistic and fits with his characters, it gets old pretty fast. On the plus side, however, it's used so often that the reader almost becomes desensitized and learns to ignore it.

Film adaptations

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References

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  1. ^ a b Shill, Aaron (November 25, 2009). "'Maze Runner' on 'right track'". Deseret Morning News. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved December 19, 2009.
  2. ^ Dig, Enric (September 24, 2014). "The Maze Runner 2014 Full Movie Review". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the original on September 25, 2014. Retrieved September 24, 2014.
  3. ^ Dashner, James [@jamesdashner] (March 2, 2021). "The book is finished! #MazeRunner" (Tweet). Retrieved May 23, 2021 – via Twitter.
  4. ^ Dashner, James [@jamesdashner] (May 21, 2020). "Have you ever wondered what happened to Newt after leaving the Berg in #TheDeathCure? Ever wondered what the world would be like 70 years later? You're soon to find out both. #TheMazeRunner" (Tweet). Retrieved May 23, 2021 – via Twitter.
  5. ^ Dashner, James [@jamesdashner] (June 21, 2022). "Can't wait for the weekend in DC! Friday at Kramers (see prior tweet) and Saturday at the annual conference of the American Library Association, where I'll be signing advance copies of THE MAZE CUTTER (Oct 4, English)" (Tweet). Retrieved July 25, 2022 – via Twitter.
  6. ^ Dashner, James (2009). The Maze Runner. New York: Delacorte Press. ISBN 978-0-553-51153-6.
  7. ^ Deutsch, Lindsay. "Exclusive cover reveal and excerpt: The Kill Order by James Dashner". USA Today. Retrieved 25 June 2013.
  8. ^ Haddock, Sharon (11 Aug 2012). "The Kill Order explains much of the series' story". Deseret News. Retrieved 25 June 2013.
  9. ^ Young, Terrell (7 February 2013). "Talking with James Dashner about The Kill Order". Herald Extra. Retrieved 25 June 2013.
  10. ^ "2 Ways to Read the Maze Runner Books in Order [All 9 Books]". 24 May 2023.
  11. ^ Dashner, James [@jamesdashner] (March 7, 2013). "Thomas's real name is actually Stephen. That was in a draft somewhere. Teresa's real name? DeeDee. ;) #dashnerchat" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  12. ^ Dashner, James [@jamesdashner] (December 9, 2020). "But in my heart, and in many ways thanks to the passion of my fans, my development as a human, and, most importantly, as Newt has become more and more real to me, I do believe he is gay. Romance was never a big part of the series, but it feels right. 2/2" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  13. ^ Sugarscape [@Sugarscape] (September 21, 2016). "#MazeRunner fans – #CrackTheFeverCode to find out who Sonya is..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  14. ^ Zeitchik, Steven (January 4, 2011). "Young-adult sensation 'The Maze Runner' gets ready to run the movie gantlet (Updated)". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 5, 2012.
  15. ^ "Maze Runner Movie Set". jamesdashner.com. Archived from the original on June 15, 2013. Retrieved September 12, 2014.
  16. ^ "The Maze Runner Movie Release Date, News, and Updates: 2 New Clips Released in Anticipation of The Premiere". hallels.com. Retrieved September 12, 2014.
  17. ^ Busch, Anita (September 21, 2014). "Box Office Sunday: 'Maze Runner' Finds $32.5M; Liam's 'Walk' Limps In; 'Where I Leave You' No. 3". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 21, 2014.
  18. ^ Maze Runner Official Twitter (October 27, 2014). "Maze Runner: Scorch Trials begins filming". Twitter. Retrieved October 27, 2014. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  19. ^ Wentz, Brook (January 29, 2015). "'The Maze Runner' sequel 'The Scorch Trials' officially wraps filming". Hypable. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  20. ^ Dashner, James (September 21, 2014). "And like that's not cool enough, it's official: THE SCORCH TRIALS movie is coming September 18, 2015. Doesn't this look sweet: #ScorchTrials". Twitter. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
  21. ^ Anita Busch (August 29, 2016). "'The Maze Runner: The Death Cure' Will Restart Production In February". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 30, 2016.
  22. ^ Ian Bailey (September 4, 2016). "Maze Runner film production leaving B.C. for South Africa". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved September 5, 2016.