

"Nevermore" is one last incredible, explosive adventure with an astonishing ending that no one could have seen coming.īook Synopsis This is it: one last incredible, explosive Maximum Ride adventure with an astonishing ending no one could have seen coming. With a script by "Iron Man" screenwriters Mark Fergus and Hawk Ostby, it's slated for a 2013 release.About the Book One last chance. It's inspired 10,000 videos on YouTube, "some of which are pretty incredible." "Maximum Ride is so visual, more so than Twilight or Iron Man," he says. While the film has been in development limbo for years now, Patterson is hopeful and optimistic about its fruition. But he's not revealing how he resolves the budding love triangle entangling Max with Fang, her old boyfriend, and Dylan, the new guy.Ī "Maximum Ride" film is currently in development at Universal Pictures. In an interview, Patterson offers another spoiler: None of the flock dies in Nevermore. "But it's over." Then he adds a plot spoiler: "It's the end of the series. "I know some kids are going to be crying at the end," says Patterson.

"Make your bets - I think you can bet on it in Vegas," quips the author, who also pens the young-adult series "Daniel X" and "Witch & Wizard."

"It had action and romance combined with a shocking ending."Īll questions and situations will be resolved in Nevermore, Patterson says. "This book was very good and one of his best books yet," wrote a fan. "While I admit that they may have been unfounded since the series was starting to go downhill, I never expected it to be this bad." "I had high hopes for this book," one reviewer wrote. Readers at have given the final book in a lengthy series of novels an average rating of 3.6 of a possible five, with 17 giving it one star.įorty-four of the 92 customer reviews, however, gave it a perfect 5. So far, the novel, which concerns a group of teenagers who can fly and were raised by evil scientists in a secret lab, has polarized fans of the series, but is flying off the shelves. But I'm not as attracted to the other characters, try as I may." "I wanted to give them an adventure they'd race through and say, 'Give me another book.' It doesn't have to be a Patterson book."īut after eight books in the series, he fears that "I'm starting to repeat myself.

Patterson says he first began the series for "reluctant readers, bright kids who are not all that interested in reading," he says.
