Foreverland Books in Order
Part ofTony Bertauski Books in OrderFind the Foreverland books in order by Tony Bertauski, with short summaries, series background, and a clear guide to where to start.
Last updated: June 10, 2026
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Publication Order
5 books
The Annihilation of Foreverland
by Tony Bertauski
2011
After an unexplained accident, boys wake on an island and are told Foreverland will heal their minds before they can go home. Danny starts asking the questions nobody wants answered.
Foreverland is Dead
by Tony Bertauski
2013
Six teenage girls wake in a harsh, controlled world with no memory of how they got there. As they test the rules of their prison, the mystery behind Foreverland grows darker and more dangerous.
Ashes of Foreverland
by Tony Bertauski
2015
Tyler Ballard sits in prison while the dreamworld his son created starts to come apart. As old players and new investigator Alessandra close in, the series opens into a much larger conspiracy.
Seeds of Foreverland
by Tony Bertauski
2015
This prequel turns back to Harold Ballard before Foreverland fully takes shape. It offers an unsettling look at the early break that helps explain the trilogy's dreamworld and damage.
Old Bastards
by Tony Bertauski
2019
Thomas wakes bleeding on a tropical island with almost no idea how he got there. This short introduction to the Foreverland world sets up a creepy puzzle about identity, memory, and survival.
Series background & context
The Foreverland books are YA science fiction thrillers built around one unsettling idea: what if a place that looks like an escape is really a trap? The series opens with teenagers waking after a supposed accident and being told that Foreverland, an alternate reality, will help repair their minds before they can go home. It sounds generous. It is not.
What makes the series work is the gap between what the adults say and what the kids slowly start to notice. On the surface, there are rules, routines, and reassuring explanations. Underneath, there is surveillance, manipulation, and a constant feeling that somebody is shaping these children for a purpose they do not understand. Danny, Reed, and the other kids are not just trying to survive a strange environment. They are trying to hold on to their own memories and judgment while the ground keeps shifting.
Then the books widen.
Later entries show that the mystery is much bigger than one island or one group of kids. The series moves into other controlled spaces, other victims, and the people who built the machinery behind Foreverland. Girls wake in a harsh new setting with no memories. Adults with money, grief, ambition, and terrible ideas step closer to the center. By the time the trilogy opens out into Ashes of Foreverland, the story is no longer only about a terrifying experiment. It is about greed, identity, and what happens when technology lets people treat consciousness like property.
That sounds heavy, and sometimes it is, but Bertauski keeps the books moving like thrillers. The chapters are built on reveals, reversals, and the steady ache of not knowing who to trust. The technology has a virtual-reality feel, but the emotional core stays personal. These are books about kids being told a story about their own lives and realizing that story may have been written by someone else.
The tone is eerie more than grim. There is action, but mystery does most of the work. Readers who like stories where reality blurs at the edges, and where every answer opens a worse question, will probably feel at home here. If you like your science fiction with a little paranoia and a lot of identity trouble, Foreverland is a good fit.
It is best read in publication order, because each book expands the world and sharpens the stakes. What starts as a creepy setup gradually becomes something broader and stranger, while still staying close to the fear and stubbornness of the young people caught inside it.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.






















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