Overall, it was a good book. However, like in book 2, the dungeon was a real drag. It was much shorter than in book 2, I’ll give you that. I just don’t appreciate the EXTREMELY long explanations of the puzzles they are facing, their thought processes, their summing up of what they just talked about and the intricate details of the systems at play in the dungeon. Holy hell. Yes, I understand the dungeon was complicated in its own way, but we don’t need to know how much it’s like tracing wiring on a circuit board just to open a door. I felt like I was reading a manual for a motherboard or a new Raspberry Pi. Outside of the dungeon, though, the book wasn’t bad. It pales in comparison to the first book, however. The events that actually transpire in the story from book one to the end of book three is great, but overall, Finn and crew are much less entertaining than Jason and his people. If it turns out Jason turns Finn into bone coat hangers for his closet, I won’t be sad about it.