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James Dashner

Author of The Maze Runner

55+ Works 49,218 Members 1,709 Reviews 42 Favorited

About the Author

James Dashner was born in Georgia and attended Brigham Young University. Before becoming a full-time writer, he worked in finance. He is the author of The 13th Reality series, The Jimmy Fincher Saga, the Mortality Doctrine series, and the Maze Runner series. The Journal of Curious Letters was show more chosen for a 2008 Borders Original Voices pick and The Maze Runner won a 2015 West Australian Young Readers' Book Award in the Older Readers category. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by James Dashner

The Maze Runner (2009) 16,360 copies
The Scorch Trials (2010) 9,703 copies
The Death Cure (2011) 7,874 copies
The Kill Order (2012) 5,252 copies
The Fever Code (2016) 2,047 copies
The Eye of Minds (2012) 1,694 copies
A Mutiny in Time (2012) 970 copies
The Rule of Thoughts (2014) 742 copies
The Game of Lives (2015) 529 copies
The Hunt for Dark Infinity (2009) 360 copies
The Blade of Shattered Hope (2010) 258 copies
The Maze Runner Trilogy (1900) 202 copies
The Iron Empire (2014) 174 copies
The Void of Mist and Thunder (2012) 163 copies
The Maze Runner Files (2013) 137 copies
The Maze Cutter (2022) 100 copies
A Door in the Woods (2003) 90 copies
A Gift of Ice (2004) 50 copies
The Tower of Air (2004) 43 copies
War of the Black Curtain (2005) 40 copies
The Godhead Complex (2023) 21 copies
The House of Tongues (2021) 14 copies
Jimmy Fincher Saga Set (2017) 4 copies
Oyun Ustasi (2016) 2 copies
The 13th Reality 5 (2015) 1 copy
Oyunbozan (2016) 1 copy

Associated Works

Maze Runner: The Death Cure [2018 film] (2018) — Lab Tech — 147 copies

Tagged

2013 (76) 2014 (112) 2015 (86) action (160) adventure (587) amnesia (133) audiobook (93) books-i-own (73) boys (74) dystopia (1,214) dystopian (863) ebook (230) experiments (75) fantasy (659) fiction (1,301) friendship (106) goodreads (82) james dashner (81) Kindle (118) labyrinths (67) library (86) Maze Runner (320) maze runner series (133) mystery (172) novel (105) own (108) owned (72) paperback (93) post-apocalyptic (397) read (252) science fiction (2,194) series (575) survival (497) suspense (90) teen (179) thriller (113) to-read (2,229) YA (855) young adult (1,440) young adult fiction (186)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1969
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Georgia, USA
Places of residence
Georgia, USA
Utah, USA
Education
Brigham Young University (MA|1999)
Organizations
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Agent
Michael Bourret
Short biography
James Smith Dashner (born November 26, 1972) is an American writer of speculative fiction, primarily series for children or young adults, such as The Maze Runner series and the young adult fantasy series the 13th Reality. His 2008 novel The Journal of Curious Letters, first in the series, was one of the annual Borders Original Voices picks.

James Dashner was born on November 26, 1972 in Austell, Georgia, as one of six children in the family. He was raised a Mormon. At the age of 10, he would type on his parents' typewriter. He graduated from Duluth High School in 1991. He moved from Atlanta, Georgia to Provo, Utah to study at Brigham Young University, where he received a master's degree in accounting. Dashner and his wife, Lynette Anderson, a former student of Brigham Young University, have four children and are now living in Utah.

Dashner is the author of the New York Times bestselling Maze Runner series that includes The Maze Runner, The Scorch Trials, The Death Cure, and The Kill Order. He has also written The Eye of Minds (book one in the Mortality Doctrine series), the 13th Reality series, and two books in The Infinity Ring series: A Mutiny in Time and The Iron Empire.

Members

Discussions

the maze runner series in Book talk (February 2016)
the maze runner in I read dashner (January 2016)

Reviews

Middle School
This story is about Thomas who wakes up with no memory and recollection. He discovers that he is now ink a maze with a bunch of other guys and must find a way to escape.
I would say this story is perfect for middle schoolers and is just a super run read in general!
 
Flagged
Cbonham21 | 778 other reviews | Apr 23, 2024 |
Once again the prospect of a movie adaptation compels me to read the book first. I'll just not mention the other compelling reason why I am doing this to myself :)

This continues to be wrought with just as much action, suspense, and confusion - maybe even more so than [b:The Maze Runner|6186357|The Maze Runner (Maze Runner, #1)|James Dashner|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1375596592s/6186357.jpg|6366642]. Like that book, not many questions are answered, if any at all. I see what they're doing. I do.

Soooo, I'll continue to be pathological if the 3rd book is made into a movie. Only then will I continue to venture forth into this madness.
… (more)
 
Flagged
A_Reader_Obsessed | 312 other reviews | Apr 21, 2024 |
In comparison to the first book, I didn't like it as much, but it still felt like a nice ending to all the stuff that happened. The most confusing part, was when the setting changed from book one to book two, which is another reason to like the book, because the reader is always on the same level of knowledge as Thomas. You never feel superior to him or like he is wrong in what he does, because you never know better yourself.
There is a slight lack of representation, but a few different ethnicities kind of make up for it, so all in all it's a good book and was a fun read for me personally.… (more)
 
Flagged
idkwhattodo | 241 other reviews | Apr 20, 2024 |
I read The Maze Runner (first book in a series) some years ago. I liked it – it was different in a really interesting way. This boy, Thomas, ends up in what is called “The Glade,” only he has no memory of how he got there or really anything else except his name. Everyone else—all boys—arrived there much as Thomas just did—via “the lift,” and with no memories of their lives before. The Glade is surrounded by this immense, seemingly endless, maze that keeps changing and the other boys in The Glade send their fastest runners into the maze daily to try to find a way through. Nobody has ever made it through. The maze isn’t exactly people friendly - there are these things called Grievers that come out when it gets dark (usually) and attack the runners - sometimes killing them. Thomas joins the other boys in the quest to find the way out, but then something unexpected happens: a girl arrives on the lift. Things are about to change…… (more)
 
Flagged
clamagna | 778 other reviews | Apr 4, 2024 |

Lists

Awards

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Associated Authors

Mark Deakins Narrator, Reader
Anke Caroline Burger Translator, Übersetzer
David Nathan Sprecher
Dan Musselman Executive producer
Gizem Yeşildal Translator
Mitchell Reichler Author photo
Łukasz Dunajski Translator
Noemí Risco Translator
Mai Tõnisoo TõLkija
Marta Mendonça Translator
Ylva Spångberg Translator
Philip Straub Cover artist
Jussi Korhonen Translator
Simona Toroscai Translator
Bryan Beus Illustrator
Lisa Vega Cover designer
Owen Richardson Cover artist

Statistics

Works
55
Also by
2
Members
49,218
Popularity
#317
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
1,709
ISBNs
641
Languages
24
Favorited
42

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