---
product_id: 232820
title: "Requiem (Delirium Trilogy, 3)"
price: "88.94 DT"
currency: TND
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.tn/products/232820-requiem-delirium-trilogy-3
store_origin: TN
region: Tunisia
---

# Requiem (Delirium Trilogy, 3)

**Price:** 88.94 DT
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- **What is this?** Requiem (Delirium Trilogy, 3)
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## Description

The third and final book in Lauren Oliver’s powerful New York Times bestselling trilogy about forbidden love, revolution, and the power to choose. Now an active member of the resistance, Lena has transformed. The nascent rebellion has ignited into an all-out revolution, and Lena is at the center of the fight. After rescuing Julian from a death sentence, Lena and her friends fled to the Wilds. But the Wilds are no longer a safe haven. Pockets of rebellion have opened throughout the country, and the government cannot deny the existence of Invalids. Regulators infiltrate the borderlands to stamp out the rebels. As Lena navigates the increasingly dangerous terrain of the Wilds, her best friend, Hana, lives a safe, loveless life in Portland as the fiancée of the young mayor. They live side by side in a world that divides them until, at last, their stories converge.

Review: Sad to see it end! - Read this and other reviews at [...] *Disclaimer: this is NOT my best review, not even close.* I find it hard to review books/series that are this amazing. The story speaks for itself and no words I say will serve any real justice to the story. Just know, the words, the characters and the storyline, they moved me. This is a fantastic series. {{This is the past: It drifts, it gathers. If you are not careful, it will bury you.}} This was one of my most highly anticipated releases for 2013, and it did not disappoint. That being said, it wasn't the best in the series, but it was amazing, nonetheless. Lauren Oliver's ability to craft words never ceases to amaze me. She's really almost in a league of her own, when it comes to the lyrical nature of her writing. It's insane how well she can weave a story and suck you in. Even though Requiem wasn't my favorite book in the Delirium series, it still blows most other books out of the water. {{Direction, like time, is a general thing, deprived of boundaries and borders. It is an endless process of interpretation and reinterpretation, doubling back and adjusting.}} Requiem picks up basically where Pandemonium ends, which if you've read Pandemonium, you know there was quite the revelation at the end. Very shocking. And exciting. But left a lot of questions. I am going to be incredibly brief on the overall plot, because well, I hate spoilers, as you already know, and really, I think this, as the others in the series, should be read blindly. I didn't read teasers, excerpts, or any other reviews or quotes before going into this. I wanted it all fresh in my brain. {{"You know you can't be happy unless you're unhappy sometimes, right?"}} There were so many changes taking place in The Wilds. The Resistance refused to be stomped out, but The Cureds weren't going down without a fight either. {{We wanted the freedom to love. We wanted the freedom to choose. Now we have to fight for it.}} This book, unlike the others, is told from dual POVs. Half of the story is from Lena, and the other half is from Hana. I thought this was great because it gave us a chance to experience life on both sides of the fence/wall. We saw what was happening in The Wilds because of Lena, but we also got the chance to see life from a Cured point of view. {{I like seeing the Wilds this way: skinny, naked, not yet clothed in spring. But reaching, too, grasping and growing, full of want and a thirst for sun that gets slaked a little bit more every day. Soon the Wilds will explode, drunk and vibrant.}} While there weren't necessarily many unexpected plot twists in the story, there were lots of heart-stopping moments. A lot of them I can't touch on without giving away vital parts of the story, so unfortunately, I have to be super vague. I think most readers' issue with this story was the realism to it. For that, I applaud Ms. Oliver. I think she wrote what truly should have happened, even though, at times, it wasn't easy to read. {{"And when it started to get dark you pointed to the sky, and told me there was a star for every thing you loved about me."}} When I read the end, I cried. I had goose bumps, and tears were streaming down my face. It's not that the ending was necessarily sad. I guess, for me, it was sad knowing it was the end of an amazing series, but more than that, I cried because it was just so awesome. I will say, in retrospect, I do think the end felt a touch rushed, but even so, while there was enough resolution, there's still plenty left to your imagination. There was nothing overly tidy about the ending. It just was. And it worked. And was so beautiful. {{He who jumps may fall, but he may also fly. It's time to jump.}} I am looking forward to reading the rest of the short stories in this series; so far, I've only read Hana, which totally threw me for a loop. I also cannot wait to see what Lauren writes next. She's up there as one of my favorite authors, and I will, no doubt, be waiting on pins and needles for her next release. I cannot recommend this series enough. I wasn't ever into dystopian fiction before, but this is so, so much more than that. THIS QUOTE RIGHT HERE! Among the others I included, just shows how AMAZING Lauren is with words. If this doesn't perfectly sum up life, I don't know what does. This gives me the chills when I read it, but it also gives me this sense of hope. I need to read it every single day. {{But maybe happiness isn't in the choosing. Maybe it's in the fiction, in the pretending: that wherever we have ended up is where we intended to all along.}}
Review: Enough Action, no romance - Delirium has been an interesting series for me. The first book was "meh" for me, the second one amazing, and the last one quite enjoyable. Of course, in the second book. Ms. Oliver left us with a cliffhanger. I'm sure most of us wanted the book to pick up exactly where Pandemonium left off, but that's not what happens. Requiem begins with Lena and her friends trekking through the Wilds, looking for a safe place after escaping with Julian from the Regulators. I still liked how much Lena had grown up since book one. She's now strong, capable, and independent. However, I didn't like how she treated Julian. I felt that she used Julian as a substitute for Alex. For a book that's about love, Requiem's focus wasn't so much on the love aspect. Though usually I hate love triangles, I really looked forward to this one, because this is actually a love triangle that made sense. But Ms. Oliver didn't really deliver on this aspect of the book. Not enough time was focused on Lena, Julian, and Alex. While we see how Lena felt throughout the book, I wish there were more scenes of Julian and Alex. What Requiem really delivered on was the action. From beginning to end, it never really slowed down. Lena and her group keeps running into one obstacle after another that kept me flipping the pages. Even the Hana chapters, which are my least favorite, had enough suspense to keep me going. I say Hana's chapters are my least favorite because I'd rather have read more about Lena, Alex, and Julian, than about Hana. Reading about Hana reminds me too much of Delirium, which was not my favorite book. Anyway, it's impossible to talk about Requiem without talking about the ending. Personally, I liked how it ended. I can see how to some that it just seemed too abrupt and would feel unfinished, but I thought it suited the tone of the book very well. While it's extremely open-ended, it's about the rising of the revolution. The revolution hasn't ended. Lena's fight is still going, so it's only natural that there wasn't a set ending. Yet, I did feel like the ending was a bit preachy for me. It was almost too philosophical, but it was still enjoyable. Requiem, while it isn't perfect, is a satisfying conclusion to the series. Lauren Oliver's writing, as always, is beautiful. I still think that the concept is flawed, just because I can't envision a future where people would voluntarily give up love, but the delivery of the story is amazing. I would recommend this series, but I think it would be better if you'd just stop after Pandemonium and let your own imagination fill the rest of the story, as Requiem fell quite short in the romance department.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #73,538 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #254 in Teen & Young Adult Dystopian #284 in Teen & Young Adult Fiction on Girls' & Women's Issues (Books) #350 in Teen & Young Adult Science Fiction & Dystopian Romance |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 6,183 Reviews |

## Images

![Requiem (Delirium Trilogy, 3) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/815mOfGB2TL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Sad to see it end!
*by M***S on March 22, 2013*

Read this and other reviews at [...] *Disclaimer: this is NOT my best review, not even close.* I find it hard to review books/series that are this amazing. The story speaks for itself and no words I say will serve any real justice to the story. Just know, the words, the characters and the storyline, they moved me. This is a fantastic series. {{This is the past: It drifts, it gathers. If you are not careful, it will bury you.}} This was one of my most highly anticipated releases for 2013, and it did not disappoint. That being said, it wasn't the best in the series, but it was amazing, nonetheless. Lauren Oliver's ability to craft words never ceases to amaze me. She's really almost in a league of her own, when it comes to the lyrical nature of her writing. It's insane how well she can weave a story and suck you in. Even though Requiem wasn't my favorite book in the Delirium series, it still blows most other books out of the water. {{Direction, like time, is a general thing, deprived of boundaries and borders. It is an endless process of interpretation and reinterpretation, doubling back and adjusting.}} Requiem picks up basically where Pandemonium ends, which if you've read Pandemonium, you know there was quite the revelation at the end. Very shocking. And exciting. But left a lot of questions. I am going to be incredibly brief on the overall plot, because well, I hate spoilers, as you already know, and really, I think this, as the others in the series, should be read blindly. I didn't read teasers, excerpts, or any other reviews or quotes before going into this. I wanted it all fresh in my brain. {{"You know you can't be happy unless you're unhappy sometimes, right?"}} There were so many changes taking place in The Wilds. The Resistance refused to be stomped out, but The Cureds weren't going down without a fight either. {{We wanted the freedom to love. We wanted the freedom to choose. Now we have to fight for it.}} This book, unlike the others, is told from dual POVs. Half of the story is from Lena, and the other half is from Hana. I thought this was great because it gave us a chance to experience life on both sides of the fence/wall. We saw what was happening in The Wilds because of Lena, but we also got the chance to see life from a Cured point of view. {{I like seeing the Wilds this way: skinny, naked, not yet clothed in spring. But reaching, too, grasping and growing, full of want and a thirst for sun that gets slaked a little bit more every day. Soon the Wilds will explode, drunk and vibrant.}} While there weren't necessarily many unexpected plot twists in the story, there were lots of heart-stopping moments. A lot of them I can't touch on without giving away vital parts of the story, so unfortunately, I have to be super vague. I think most readers' issue with this story was the realism to it. For that, I applaud Ms. Oliver. I think she wrote what truly should have happened, even though, at times, it wasn't easy to read. {{"And when it started to get dark you pointed to the sky, and told me there was a star for every thing you loved about me."}} When I read the end, I cried. I had goose bumps, and tears were streaming down my face. It's not that the ending was necessarily sad. I guess, for me, it was sad knowing it was the end of an amazing series, but more than that, I cried because it was just so awesome. I will say, in retrospect, I do think the end felt a touch rushed, but even so, while there was enough resolution, there's still plenty left to your imagination. There was nothing overly tidy about the ending. It just was. And it worked. And was so beautiful. {{He who jumps may fall, but he may also fly. It's time to jump.}} I am looking forward to reading the rest of the short stories in this series; so far, I've only read Hana, which totally threw me for a loop. I also cannot wait to see what Lauren writes next. She's up there as one of my favorite authors, and I will, no doubt, be waiting on pins and needles for her next release. I cannot recommend this series enough. I wasn't ever into dystopian fiction before, but this is so, so much more than that. THIS QUOTE RIGHT HERE! Among the others I included, just shows how AMAZING Lauren is with words. If this doesn't perfectly sum up life, I don't know what does. This gives me the chills when I read it, but it also gives me this sense of hope. I need to read it every single day. {{But maybe happiness isn't in the choosing. Maybe it's in the fiction, in the pretending: that wherever we have ended up is where we intended to all along.}}

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Enough Action, no romance
*by D***S on March 23, 2013*

Delirium has been an interesting series for me. The first book was "meh" for me, the second one amazing, and the last one quite enjoyable. Of course, in the second book. Ms. Oliver left us with a cliffhanger. I'm sure most of us wanted the book to pick up exactly where Pandemonium left off, but that's not what happens. Requiem begins with Lena and her friends trekking through the Wilds, looking for a safe place after escaping with Julian from the Regulators. I still liked how much Lena had grown up since book one. She's now strong, capable, and independent. However, I didn't like how she treated Julian. I felt that she used Julian as a substitute for Alex. For a book that's about love, Requiem's focus wasn't so much on the love aspect. Though usually I hate love triangles, I really looked forward to this one, because this is actually a love triangle that made sense. But Ms. Oliver didn't really deliver on this aspect of the book. Not enough time was focused on Lena, Julian, and Alex. While we see how Lena felt throughout the book, I wish there were more scenes of Julian and Alex. What Requiem really delivered on was the action. From beginning to end, it never really slowed down. Lena and her group keeps running into one obstacle after another that kept me flipping the pages. Even the Hana chapters, which are my least favorite, had enough suspense to keep me going. I say Hana's chapters are my least favorite because I'd rather have read more about Lena, Alex, and Julian, than about Hana. Reading about Hana reminds me too much of Delirium, which was not my favorite book. Anyway, it's impossible to talk about Requiem without talking about the ending. Personally, I liked how it ended. I can see how to some that it just seemed too abrupt and would feel unfinished, but I thought it suited the tone of the book very well. While it's extremely open-ended, it's about the rising of the revolution. The revolution hasn't ended. Lena's fight is still going, so it's only natural that there wasn't a set ending. Yet, I did feel like the ending was a bit preachy for me. It was almost too philosophical, but it was still enjoyable. Requiem, while it isn't perfect, is a satisfying conclusion to the series. Lauren Oliver's writing, as always, is beautiful. I still think that the concept is flawed, just because I can't envision a future where people would voluntarily give up love, but the delivery of the story is amazing. I would recommend this series, but I think it would be better if you'd just stop after Pandemonium and let your own imagination fill the rest of the story, as Requiem fell quite short in the romance department.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ My favorite of the three...
*by R***. on March 24, 2013*

Title: Requiem Author: Lauren Oliver Rating: 5 Stars My Review - This has SPOILERS! It's book three in a trilogy, peeps... For me, this was the perfect ending. What's funny is at first I was like, "I called it. This is really about Hana and her mother more than it is about boys." *pats self on back*. But no, as always, Oliver is more layered than that. Somehow she took an essentially fantasy story (Dystopian, I know. But still fantastical) and injected it with a huge dose of real. It was real that Alex tried to let Lena move on, and that she tried as well, and that Julian will suffer in the end because they couldn't. Messy? Yes. But real. Real people do these sorts of things: lie to themselves, take what they can get, hide... On the surface people might call this a love triangle, but I find that to be an over-used term, applied to any situation in which there might be more than one love interest for a major character. In this case, Lena really only loved Alex. She took comfort in Julian's love for her, but her love for Alex never wavered. Another dose of real? The fact that Lena and her mother, now "Bee," didn't just fall into each other's arms and make up. After so long and so many scars, how could they? The same thing is true with Hana. Oliver really twists your heart with the knowledge that Halena is gone forever. That pretty moment of love, the innocent, share everything including gum, lie on your back and watch the clouds, "I promise we'll be best friends forever kind of love," is gone. How often are the Halenas lost forever? How many of us set aside our childish things in favor of what is expected, acceptable, and predictable. How much do we "cure" ourselves, stripping away the things we love until there is nothing left but data: your favorite color, favorite meal, hobbies... In this story there is real love, the kind that slips and slides and refuses to just sit down and stay put where we want it. It was critical that Oliver show you real love in this story, seeing as its extremes (the agony and the ecstasy, if you will) make up the critical commentary. Is one worth the other? Does one give the other *more* value than it would otherwise have? "You know you can't be happy unless you're unhappy sometimes, right?" THAT is the core of this story, the heartbeat, and it's a question we ask ourselves every day. And so I am struck, finally, by the dragnet of this story...not the surface of dystopia and cures and subterfuge, but the deeper hooks, the ones that dig into you and drag, bleeding your answers from the wounds. No. I don't believe you can ever truly be happy if you're never unhappy. Is that such a strange concept? I think we all agree on this, and yet, and yet, we seek heaven on Earth at every turn and curse our ill fortunes rather than feeling the balance of it all. That's the way of it, I guess. I rail at the injustices along with everyone else. I can understand wanting a cure... She's got me thinking, as usual. Back to the story... I LOVE Alex. That doesn't mean that I don't love Julian. Julian is lovely and delightful and one day he'll find love again; something that those of us that are older come to accept...even though that is a little tragic, too, in a way. But I LOVE LOVE Alex. He's exactly the right match for Lena, in the end. And it was inevitable that they would find their way back to one another, in the end. I was glad that Oliver gave us that. She had, had, had to give us that. The Crew. Raven and Tack, mostly, but also the others. I loved the little crew that Lena found and helped in the Resistance. It was all caprice that she was found by them in the first place in Pandemonium, but she was loyal and she stuck with them through the end. I liked some of the new characters they came across, like Pippa. When Oliver wrote the end of Raven's story, it had to have hurt. Because it hurt me to read it. She'd been so important to Lena, the missing mother that she needed. Even though Raven was tough, she always understood when Lena was at her limits and gave her room. Her loss was a deep blow. The Retribution. I LOVED when Fred Hargrove went BOOM! Also delightful. It was amazing the way Oliver deftly traded out psychotic villians in each tome, with the young Fred Hargrove being introduced in this one as the most nefarious of the lot. You get the idea that he's probably the kind of guy that has no problem hitting a woman *real* quick, but the extra layer of torturing animals and the Bluebeard story suggests full Dahmer-like sickness. You're very, very happy when Fred Hargrove goes BOOM. Hana. Given that her POV was half the story, you'd think I would have talked about her sooner. But it's easier to talk about Hana's loss than it is to talk about Hana herself. When I saw that Oliver chose to write from the POV of one of the cured, I was surprised. It was a great idea, but also so challenging. How do you write from the POV of someone with no feelings? I have to say it was extremely well done, and even though Hana's cure wasn't "perfect" because she still felt pangs and had dreams and memories, you could tell it was dulled. In fact, even though she is somewhat "released," her story makes it clear that the cured will never be free. They will always be dulled, cut off from the others and their feelings. It's tragic. The walls will come down and the uncured will go back to being the messy, unpredictable, hit-or-miss creatures that they are, but the zombies will never be the same. They will not care for their children, or spouses, or selves ever again. So was it a happy ending? Yesish. That will have to do. Was it satisfying? Extremely. Have I given up thumping Oliver for not making it more sci-fi detailed for me? Yes. I loved it. Go get it. One of the best dystopian trilogies, bar none. BTW - Oodles of people wanted more at the end. I understand that feeling. I did too. I wanted to see Lena and Alex happy together and have a big, pretty bow...but I didn't feel it. The ending works for me.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Requiem (Delirium Trilogy, 3)
- Pandemonium (Delirium Trilogy, 2)
- Delirium (Delirium Trilogy, 1)

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