Aitch: A Life in Colour: Conversations with My Hair Stylist
Book
We've all chatted with our hair stylist. But how often do our conversations reveal extraordinary...
Alexander McQueen: Blood Beneath the Skin
Book
When Alexander McQueen committed suicide in February 2010, aged just 40, a shocked world mourned the...
Aprons and Silver Spoons: The Heartwarming Memoirs of a 1930s Scullery Maid
Book
If you liked Downton Abbey and Upstairs, Downstairs, it's time to discover the reality in Mollie...
Bathed in Lightning: John McLaughlin, the 60s and the Emerald Beyond
Book
On February 16 1969, John McLaughlin flew into New York, from London, in a snowstorm. The following...
An Army of One: A John Rossett Novel
Book
In this enthralling historical thriller set in post-World War II London, detective John Henry...
The Irregular: A Different Class of Spy
Book
As a boy, he spied for Sherlock Holmes. As a man, he must save the Empire. London 1909: The British...
Ross (3284 KP) rated The Change 1: London: Orbital in Books
Nov 2, 2020
We meet Howard, who seems to have no memory prior to page 1 of the book, which serves nicely to give us an introduction to how the world changed in ... The Change. He assumes his name is Howard because it is written in the front page of a notebook he finds on his person.
He is moving around the M2 motorway that surrounds London, full of stationary cars (good to see some things didn't change when the world ended) and dead bodies, very reminiscent of early scenes in the Walking Dead.
He soon finds himself taken in by a biker gang who have made themselves a community in a former Welcome Break service station.
The community is attacked by an unusual monster and we follow him and his new best friend, Hubcap, as they try to survive.
The story is intriguing, but quite what happened with The Change, is barely touched on, and neither is Howard's strange amnesia and what he feels he needs to do (travel into London).
The action is exciting, the dialogue well written and the cast of bikers and hangers-on are well crafted. However, the book is so short and largely has no real plot as such, just a series of things happening, and the reader is left wanting more.
Not a childrens book as such, but safely young adult.
Tom Chaplin recommended Bring It On by Gomez in Music (curated)
The Secret Order: Ancient Times HD - An Adventure Hidden Object Game
Games and Entertainment
App
Play the trial for FREE! Pay once & complete the adventure! After the recovery of the mask and...
Wreckers of Civilisation
Book
"These people are the wreckers of civilisation", exclaimed the Conservative Member of Parliament...