Book finales are always tricky. You want them to have a good ending and everything wrapped up in a nice little bow. Allegiant was the most-awaited book this fall, I guess, and pretty much every Divergent fan was waiting to see how Roth ended this series.
The entire series we are shown the struggle humanity has with themselves. How the stay true to their ideals in front of the challenges presented to them and Tris was such an excellent character to view this from. That being said, I did, however find it lovely that Roth even included Tobias’ POV for this book – especially given the ending of the book. As we came to know in the last book, everyone finds out they are part of a giant experiment to know whether human virtues can save humanity in the end and the extraordinary people Divergent were supposed to be the big help to the people on the outside.
In Allegiant, everything we know from the last two books has been totally turned around – I mean, nothing could have prepared anyone for the reveal in Allegiant. The reason for the experiments, why the factions exist, why the Divergent are important. The problems in Chicago are also on the outside, just in a different context, and here is where Tris and Tobias are challenged. Their world has been expanded to such limits as to make them feel inconsequential and yet they manage to leave such a mark in this book. The problems in the outside world are much worse than what they had in their closetted little city and the stakes are much higher. They have to make tougher decisions and find out what lengths they are ready to go to save the ones closest to them. The entire series has been a glorious study in human nature and what is based on what we know to be true and what we are. If you are told something for as long as you remember, it becomes truth for you – whether or not it is real. I think Roth particularly wants to say that we are limited by our own selves and not by what we are brought up on. We can endeavour to be what we want to be.
The writing is as usual, spectacular – I was hooked for all the 8 hours that I spent reading it and it still doesn’t feel enough. I want more but oddly I am satisfied too. She gave the book such a real ending, not great, but real and I know not everyone is happy with it (I gathered this much despite avoiding all mentions, reviews and spoilers online) but I am content with it. I wouldn’t say happy because it wasn’t the way I would have wanted it to end but then it is her story and I like to be surprised too. That was what made me feel so good about this book – Roth did something we never expected her to do but even so you can’t begrudge her the powerful way she did it. Full points for the most explosive final book ever.
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Allegiant DVD – 1 January 2016
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Veronica Roth
(Author)
Veronica Roth
(Author)
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PublisherUK Children’s
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Publication date1 January 2016
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ISBN-109780007538027
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ISBN-13978-0007538027
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Product details
- ASIN : B01EKWTMRA
- Publisher : UK Children’s; Latest edition (1 January 2016)
- ISBN-10 : 9780007538027
- ISBN-13 : 978-0007538027
- Item Weight : 362 g
- Best Sellers Rank: #922,554 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Customer reviews
4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
6,092 global ratings
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Top reviews from India
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Reviewed in India on 24 November 2013
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12 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in India on 11 September 2015
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well after reading this book i thought of many aspects of life. yes i was a bit sad the way it ended but happy too, beco'z this is how life is!! i think the story was near reality where u sacrifice urself for the people u love most.
i agree with Tobias ~selflessness and bravery are same thing. well some people thinks that why there has to b a death when we can just make it the way we want it to end like happily forever but this is not real, in real life people die and those left behind will always remember them as hero or a brave hero. i think thats the beauty of the ending u make sacrifices when u knw its worth ur life..
so yeah it was heartbreaking but at the same time heartwarming must read book.. all thumbs up..
i agree with Tobias ~selflessness and bravery are same thing. well some people thinks that why there has to b a death when we can just make it the way we want it to end like happily forever but this is not real, in real life people die and those left behind will always remember them as hero or a brave hero. i think thats the beauty of the ending u make sacrifices when u knw its worth ur life..
so yeah it was heartbreaking but at the same time heartwarming must read book.. all thumbs up..
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Reviewed in India on 22 September 2018
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It's the culmination of the Divergent trilogy. It gets a bit confusing at places and the end is almost predictable, with the heroine, Tris, dying and the hero, Tobias, intensely grieving but eventually getting on with life. And their world having experimented with a faction-ordered society and failed and going back to the usual rough and tumble of human life.
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Reviewed in India on 7 September 2014
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When I saw Divergent, Insurgent and Allegiant were on 50% off, I made an impulse purchase and I am glad that I did. Being a fan of Dystopian genre, I was pleasantly surprised by the author's imagination and the way she ended the series. Do buy this series if you enjoy reading Dystopian genre as well.
Reviewed in India on 19 January 2014
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The title doesn't speak for the Amazon experience. Because it has always been snag-free for me. The product, which invariably means the story, is decent enough for a one-time read. The book was for my sister, and she liked only the first offering, while the second one was okay, and the third one just didn't leave her impressed. No way near the experience she had while reading the Hunger Games trilogy.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in India on 20 November 2017
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the book was really nice and i loved it. it was a story from both tris's and tobias' side. but the ending was sad as tris died.igive this book 4 stars for this reason; but otherwise the book was really nice.
Reviewed in India on 10 December 2016
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The book was very exciting and thrilling but didn't live up to my expectations. The first and second part of the series were anytime better than this one.
Reviewed in India on 14 January 2018
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The third book in the Divergent series isnt as gripping as the first two parts. Though it's definitely worth a read if you like the series.
Top reviews from other countries

Ms. L. Kelly
2.0 out of 5 stars
The Divergent Series on the whole is great but the quality and direction of the plot depletes ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 March 2016Verified Purchase
The Divergent Series on the whole is great but the quality and direction of the plot depletes as the books progress and I was very disappointed with the final book. The characters are refreshingly flawed but their more irritating qualities become more focused in book 3 to the point where I simply stopped caring what happened to them.
Split POV was rubbish and I kept forgetting whose narrative I was reading, mostly becuase they were basically the same style.
The ending is bizarre (spoiler alert). It seems that what our main character Tris has been learning the whole time goes out the window when she decides its worth killing herself to perform the very act of horror on one group of people that she decided must be stopped happening to another. How can the characters decide that to right the wrongs of the Bureau they must eradiciate their memories, everyones memories, innocent people and leaders! Thus, letting them off the hook whilst the main 'baddies' get away scot free and remember everything.
Meanwhile, poor pathetic Four/Tobias (former bad-ass turned wet blanket) is left bereft and alone.
Depressing and hollow. What a shame Tris didn't realise it would be best to destroy the serums altogether, thus preventing any further use, and negotiate the same peace deal achieved between the main bad guys anyway. Then she and Four could run off in to the sunset.
Split POV was rubbish and I kept forgetting whose narrative I was reading, mostly becuase they were basically the same style.
The ending is bizarre (spoiler alert). It seems that what our main character Tris has been learning the whole time goes out the window when she decides its worth killing herself to perform the very act of horror on one group of people that she decided must be stopped happening to another. How can the characters decide that to right the wrongs of the Bureau they must eradiciate their memories, everyones memories, innocent people and leaders! Thus, letting them off the hook whilst the main 'baddies' get away scot free and remember everything.
Meanwhile, poor pathetic Four/Tobias (former bad-ass turned wet blanket) is left bereft and alone.
Depressing and hollow. What a shame Tris didn't realise it would be best to destroy the serums altogether, thus preventing any further use, and negotiate the same peace deal achieved between the main bad guys anyway. Then she and Four could run off in to the sunset.
8 people found this helpful
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bella170711
1.0 out of 5 stars
Seriously disappointed!!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 April 2017Verified Purchase
I don't often write reviews on books...I have to feel very strongly about them one way or the other to consider sharing my experience. This book unfortunately has left me with a very unpleasant taste in my mouth!! Even more disappointing when I so thoroughly enjoyed the first 2 books, which were quite simply amazing!! This final book was the complete polar opposite of amazing. I won't bother repeating in detail what a lot of the other disheartened reviewers have written, as all of them repeat the same points on blurring character narration, boring plot lines full of holes, moving at snail speed, topped off with an ending that just leaves you feeling angry that you persevered all the way to the end & you weren't even compensated with a 'happily ever after' for Tris & Tobias. But I quite simply feel angry,robbed & seriously disappointed!! What a waste of time after the first 2 fantastic books!! The author should seriously consider removing this 3rd book from print & rewriting the entire thing again!!!
9 people found this helpful
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M. D. Saunderson
3.0 out of 5 stars
Why the switches in the 1st person's viewpoint?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 June 2015Verified Purchase
I found the constant shifting of the first-person narrative from Tris to Tobias (Four,) and back, chapter by chapter hard to keep up with.
I would get half way through paragraphs, only so realise that it was now Four, not Tris who was the narrator, or the other way round. They both sound/read the same. Other authors have done it, and pulled it off, but they made the narrative style of the two protagonists so different that it was easy to tell who's view point we were seeing the action from.
Tolkien managed multiple plot lines in the Lord of the Rings with little or no confusion.
Ian M Banks did it brilliantly in "Feersum Endginn" (Fearsome Engine) by using conventional spelling for one charaters narrative, and the other haf ov it foneticaly speld. U noo hoo waz torking, it was obviuz.
Some of my expectations were met - I had already realised that the city (Chicago) was some form of experiment part way through book 1 - the gates were locked to keep people in, not out. A bit of a let down.
TO be fair, Stephen King can not write the last few pages of most of his multi-million selling books either. 600 pages of excellence, followed by the ending "So I hit it on the head with a rock & killed IT."
I would get half way through paragraphs, only so realise that it was now Four, not Tris who was the narrator, or the other way round. They both sound/read the same. Other authors have done it, and pulled it off, but they made the narrative style of the two protagonists so different that it was easy to tell who's view point we were seeing the action from.
Tolkien managed multiple plot lines in the Lord of the Rings with little or no confusion.
Ian M Banks did it brilliantly in "Feersum Endginn" (Fearsome Engine) by using conventional spelling for one charaters narrative, and the other haf ov it foneticaly speld. U noo hoo waz torking, it was obviuz.
Some of my expectations were met - I had already realised that the city (Chicago) was some form of experiment part way through book 1 - the gates were locked to keep people in, not out. A bit of a let down.
TO be fair, Stephen King can not write the last few pages of most of his multi-million selling books either. 600 pages of excellence, followed by the ending "So I hit it on the head with a rock & killed IT."
6 people found this helpful
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Tracey Madeley
5.0 out of 5 stars
There are shades of Huxley’s Island in this book with the factions as some kind of experiment in a better way of living
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 January 2017Verified Purchase
This book is different to the other two, although it keeps the traditional first person narrative of a YA novel. We have both Tris and Tobias’s point of view, alternating between the chapters. It can be a little disorientating if you put the book down between chapters, but the ending confirms the reason for the change in format. It is also interesting to see things from Tobias’s point of view and not have his emotions filtered through Tris. I also feel we get a more rounded view of Tris and her more reckless, Dauntless side.
There are shades of Huxley’s Island in this book with the factions as some kind of experiment in a better way of living, as well as Big Brother and 1984. We also learn more about why the faction system was established and there is an even greater sense of manipulation and control. For Tobias the polarisation is taken even further with both parents being on opposite sides with Tris following Marcus at one point.
The concept of a memory serum is fascinating and a more subtle form of control than the simulation in the previous books. Here memory can be wiped and a new version of history taught. Peter tries to take this a step further and banish his more aggressive and negative traits, but the suggestion is that they begin to creep back. This is the basis for the old argument of nature verses nurture in relation o the formation of personality.
Having both Tris and Tobias’s perspectives enables a deeper understanding of their relationship. It also highlights the difficulties and sources of conflict in most relationships – friends, family, forgiveness, jealousy and makes some very profound comments about the nature of forgiveness. “If we stay together, I’ll have to forgive you over and over again, and if you’re still in this, you’ll have to forgive me over and over again too,’ I say. ‘So forgiveness isn’t the point. What I really should have been tryi9ng to figure out is whether we were still good for each other.”
I thoroughly enjoyed the Divergence series and felt the ending was more satisfying and credible than the Hunger Games. I found the series more complex and relevant to modern day issues of relationship, personality, control and the role of the State. For this reason I would rate it above the Hunger Games and now look forward to seeing the film and reading Four!
There are shades of Huxley’s Island in this book with the factions as some kind of experiment in a better way of living, as well as Big Brother and 1984. We also learn more about why the faction system was established and there is an even greater sense of manipulation and control. For Tobias the polarisation is taken even further with both parents being on opposite sides with Tris following Marcus at one point.
The concept of a memory serum is fascinating and a more subtle form of control than the simulation in the previous books. Here memory can be wiped and a new version of history taught. Peter tries to take this a step further and banish his more aggressive and negative traits, but the suggestion is that they begin to creep back. This is the basis for the old argument of nature verses nurture in relation o the formation of personality.
Having both Tris and Tobias’s perspectives enables a deeper understanding of their relationship. It also highlights the difficulties and sources of conflict in most relationships – friends, family, forgiveness, jealousy and makes some very profound comments about the nature of forgiveness. “If we stay together, I’ll have to forgive you over and over again, and if you’re still in this, you’ll have to forgive me over and over again too,’ I say. ‘So forgiveness isn’t the point. What I really should have been tryi9ng to figure out is whether we were still good for each other.”
I thoroughly enjoyed the Divergence series and felt the ending was more satisfying and credible than the Hunger Games. I found the series more complex and relevant to modern day issues of relationship, personality, control and the role of the State. For this reason I would rate it above the Hunger Games and now look forward to seeing the film and reading Four!

Topaz
3.0 out of 5 stars
Mediocre three
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 February 2016Verified Purchase
I loved the first two books in this trilogy, and naturally once I'd finished book two, I was itching to see what happens next.
But, I found myself disappointed with this final installment.
This book is written differently from the first two in that it is written from the point of view of both Tobias and Tris. The chapters throughout the books are all imaginatively called either 'Tobias' or 'Tris'.
In the first two books, Tobias comes across as strong and forceful, but in this one, he is weak and apathetic - Maybe he has been eating too much Amity bread!
I found myself constantly flicking back to the beginning of the chapters because I had forgotten who's point of view it was written from, as there was no appreciable difference in the way in which the characters were written.
The book seemed to slowly meander onward in a leisurely fashion, without the page turning excitement of the first two books. In places, it was so dull that my mind started to wander - never a good sign.
And the ending! Why? I was left feeling cheated that I had got to know these characters, bonded with them, and then...............
I wish now that I had stopped reading at the end of the second book.
There are so many fabulous and fantastic ways that this trilogy could have panned out, but this final installment certainly did not echo those possibilities, it just fizzled out into mediocrity.
But, I found myself disappointed with this final installment.
This book is written differently from the first two in that it is written from the point of view of both Tobias and Tris. The chapters throughout the books are all imaginatively called either 'Tobias' or 'Tris'.
In the first two books, Tobias comes across as strong and forceful, but in this one, he is weak and apathetic - Maybe he has been eating too much Amity bread!
I found myself constantly flicking back to the beginning of the chapters because I had forgotten who's point of view it was written from, as there was no appreciable difference in the way in which the characters were written.
The book seemed to slowly meander onward in a leisurely fashion, without the page turning excitement of the first two books. In places, it was so dull that my mind started to wander - never a good sign.
And the ending! Why? I was left feeling cheated that I had got to know these characters, bonded with them, and then...............
I wish now that I had stopped reading at the end of the second book.
There are so many fabulous and fantastic ways that this trilogy could have panned out, but this final installment certainly did not echo those possibilities, it just fizzled out into mediocrity.
3 people found this helpful
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