Review by Booklist Review
Picking up where Island of Silence (2012) ended, this installment finds the world of Artime decimated and Alex Stowe with a growing list of problems. With no food or water, he is helpless to prevent the exodus of Unwanteds who are choosing a life of servitude in Quill rather than wasting away in a lost world. Furthermore, his friends are still trapped on Warbler, and Meghan, the only Unwanted who managed to escape the ill-fated expedition to Warbler, has been rendered mute by a necklace of thorns. But Mr. Today's faith in Alex was well-appointed. The development of Alex as a leader is one of the most satisfying aspects of the novel; it is in stark contrast to the regression of his twin, Aaron, still whining away in Quill and becoming increasingly paranoid. The series appears to have left its dystopian roots behind and developed into a full-blown fantasy saga. Another cliff-hanger ending will keep fans wanting more. New readers will need to start at the beginning in order to catch up.--Dean, Kara Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 3-7-Previous series installment Island of Silence ended with the loss of Artime, its mage, and all the hopes of the Unwanteds, magically artistic children who were sent from their homes for being too creative. The first few chapters are a little bumpy: first Alex tries to figure out the puzzle Mr. Today left, then he gives up, then becomes a leader, and then everybody leaves the group. It doesn't appear as if the author knows whether she wants Alex to be Supermage or a colossal failure. However, the book finds its groove by the time Alex miraculously restores the land of Artime. This will be a little frustrating for new listeners, but fans of the first two books will likely stick it out, if only to find out what happens. Steve West is the third narrator in as many books. While different narrators might not be a problem for a series distinguished by different points of view or broken by significant spans of time, the discontinuity in this series is jarring, though West does an adequate job. That aside, Island of Fire provides an absolute firecracker of a cliff-hanger, so listeners will definitely be chomping at the bit for book four. Librarians should have the whole series on hand to give to the next student who asks for a Harry Potter or Hunger Games readalike.- Michaela Schied, Indian River Middle School, Philadelphia, NY (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review
Alex struggles to decipher the riddle that will return magic to the land of Artimi, while Lani and Samheed wait for him to rescue them from Warbler Island. The characters go through a range of emotions that fit their situations, and Alex comes into his own as a leader. Multiple plot twists keep this third story moving and should hold series fans' interest. (c) Copyright 2014. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
McMann builds her newly minted mage's self-confidence, firms up some emotional hookups and pitches her burgeoning cast into a series of rescues in this middle volume. The story opens with a crisis carried over from the previous episode and closes with a sudden attack by parties unknown. In between, Alex Stowe solves a riddle left by founding wizard Marcus Today to restore the Unwanteds' magic school of Artim, then leads an expedition of magical squirrelicorns, origami dragons and other constructs, along with the giant, flying, stone cheetah Simber, to Warbler Island to rescue imprisoned fellow students Samheed and Lani. Meanwhile, Alex is also bumbling his way through a growing attachment to Sky (who makes his heart "swish") while his evil Wanted twin, Aaron, is shakily usurping the office of high priest in neighboring Quill. Readers who aren't fresh on the content of the two preceding volumes will struggle to keep all the characters distinct, but the author chucks in comical byplay and even vomit jokes to keep things from getting too serious, and she breaks the tale into dozens of short chapters to goose up the action. Projected to run through four more volumes, the storyline doesn't advance much here--but the quick pace, unresolved issues and Hogwarts-ian setting will keep the audience Wanting more. (Fantasy. 10-14)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.