This final installment of the Dewey Decimal trilogy capably stands alone
as a quirky, sparkly read that will embiggen your cerebellum.
--Library Journal
Larson treats the English language as a sort of toy to play with and use
for experimentation; language is not just used to tell the story, in
other words, but is a part of the story, an extension of its narrator,
Dewey Decimal, one of the more offbeat characters in fiction. A fitting
conclusion to a unique and memorable trilogy.
--Booklist
A sharp and satisfying conclusion to one of the most unique hard-boiled
arcs in recent memory.
--Kirkus Reviews
Dewey is an unlikely hero, a gimpy, smart-mouthed loner, obsessed with a
brand-name hand sanitizer. His indomitable spirit and his distinctive
ghetto-infused, educated patter give Larson's series its unique and
spicy character.
--Publishers Weekly
The final book in Larson's compulsively readable, uniquely strange Dewey
Decimal trilogy, The Immune System features Larson's patented ability
to play with words and sentence structure in a way that mirrors the
disorienting events happening in the plot. And yet, because the reader
is in such good hands with Larson, it doesn't matter if everything is
clear right from the start. Just trust that Larson knows where he's
taking you, and enjoy the slightly surreal, definitely funny ride.
--The L Magazine
The final book in the Dewey Decimal System trilogy, in which Dewey deals
with dirty politicians, civilian outcasts, Saudi, royals, and the truth
about the cataclysmic events in NYC. I adored these books, and it
thrills me to know the author is also a member of Shudder to Think.
--Book Riot
The final installment of one of the finest (and weirdest) thriller
trilogies ever....There is physical action aplenty in this breathtaking
novel--fistfights, shoot-outs, bombs, etc.--but during the finale of
Larson's glorious trilogy, we learn that in the end, the only struggle
that ever mattered was Decimal's struggle with himself.
--Mystery Scene
[An] engrossing concluding entry in Larson's Dewey Decimal
trilogy....Larson's version of New York City is vividly...realized,
almost becoming a character in itself, and his fast-paced narrative
style makes the most of both his post-apocalyptic setting and his
brain-scrambled protagonist.
--Manhattan Book Review
A perfect synthesis of poetic observation melded with streetwise patois,
percussive and rhythmic....It's quite a feat to write a dystopia that is
fun and takes the reader to a better place for a while. Larson does
this.
--Razorcake
The Immune System is the explosive final installment in the Dewey
Decimal trilogy. Picking up months after the events of The Nervous
System, Dewey finds himself running dirty operations for the crooked
Senator Howard. When Dewey is tasked with disrupting unrest from a
growing group of outcast civilians, and simultaneously given the
assignment of protecting a pair of Saudi royals, he is forced to look
within and make some impossible choices. Ultimately, this puts him at
odds with his benefactor and the powers that be.
In the course of the novel, we learn the true nature of the 2/14
cataclysm that decimated New York City, and by the end of it, Dewey must
choose whether or not to face his own past. He must also decide if he is
to be part of the elite control system, or if he's willing to commit
himself to the unknown, without the protections he enjoys in the good
favor of the landlords of the new New Order.