If you are the sort of reader who enjoys stories with cheerful endings, trustworthy adults, and only a moderate amount of murder, then you would be wise to avoid The Gilded Labyrinth. In this thoroughly unfortunate volume, the Baudelaire orphans arrive at a sprawling mansion filled with hidden passages, secret codes, and a guardian who is intelligent, brave, and dangerously kindhearted. For a brief and deeply misleading moment, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny begin to believe they may finally be safe. But when a long-dead man returns from the shadows, Count Olaf infiltrates the house in disguise, and terrible secrets about V.F.D. begin clawing their way into the light, the children find themselves trapped inside a conspiracy far older — and far crueler — than they ever imagined. Featuring poisoned loyalties, devastating betrayals, a scandalously handsome librarian, and one of the grisliest deaths in the history of the organization, this book is not recommended for anyone who values their emotional wellbeing.
Noah Kahan returns home to Strafford, Vermont where he is reunited with his childhood best friend Ben. The two learn a lot and realise that they both have changed and have a lot to reconcile.
After all adults mysteriously vanish following a particle accelerator accident, you’re left alone in a silent, abandoned world where technology is failing and survival grows harder every day. After strange headaches lead you to the Sparticles, you quickly become part of the group and join them on dangerous journeys across deserted towns and hostile territories controlled by other children. Together, you search for answers behind the disappearances while uncovering secrets that could change everything.
Y/N died in 2009, they were barely cold in their grave when the rising happened. Now five years later they are being treated for PDS. For the first time since they died they’re finally coming to terms with what happened, what they did. As an undead.