The V Girl: A Coming Of Age Story
Book
Romance set in a dystopian future In post-apocalyptic North America two emerging nations are at...
Young Adult Science Fiction Dystopian Romance
Blackout Trail
Book
When the world goes dark, a doctor embarks on a perilous journey. Doctor Anna Hastings is no...
Post Apocalyptic Science Fiction Thriller
Shaun Collins (3 KP) rated Star Trek, Volume 9: The Q Gambit in Books
Jan 12, 2018
This "post-apocalyptic" style story works incredibly well, and the cameos by established characters from down the line are met with great amounts of fun and just the right bit of timing. My one complaint is Kirk, who seems reactionary throughout the tale, and never manages to proactively become the hero (in fact, it is Spock and Q who solve the problem). But small potatoes, as they say. This was actually the first arc that convinced me to give IDWs Trek comics a chance, and while I disagree with their story telling choices on most of the run, the stories themselves are still entertainingly told. This one is no exception.
The story follows Ryhalt Galharrow, a captain in the Blackwing, a group of soldiers and enforcers working for the supreme magician Crowfoot. They are charged with keeping order along the Range and tracking down dissenters and run-aways.
Galharrow quickly finds himself embroiled in a plot and a battle to save the republic from itself and the evil Deep Kings and their hordes of mutated zombies.
The narrative is extremely gritty and at times you can almost smell the filth and second-hand brandy.
While you are thrown into it without warning and without preamble, this is to McDonald's credit, as the reader pieces things together quite quickly, or can make up their own mind about how things look and work.
To sum this up, I would say it was like Mark Lawrence or Joe Abercrombie ghost-writing a Brandon Sanderson plot - with the best aspects of both sides (the gritty dialogue from the grimdark authors with the intricately designed magic system and urban landscape of the plotter).
A superbly crafted story with excellent flowing prose.
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2200 KP) rated The Future King in Books
Apr 6, 2020
If you haven’t read this series yet, don’t start with this book. It assumes you’ve read the first two, and there isn’t much background given to help explain the world that has been created. This book starts out a little slowly with too many teases about what might happen in the future, but once the main quest really gets going, the book picks up, and there are twists and surprises that kept me engaged. The characters are good, and Fort does more growing here. I’m not a fan of the post-apocalyptic setting, especially right now, but I am intrigue enough that I have to know what is going to happen next, so I will be back for more.
Unstoppable: Highway Truck Racing Game
Games
App
Rev your engines and sharpen your circular saws! Unstoppable is a furious post-apocalyptic truck...
Chaos Comes (After the EMP #4)
Book
Two weeks into the apocalypse, would your switch be flipped? Colt's a no-nonsense air marshal who...
Chaos Evolves (After the EMP Book 6)
Book
A month into the apocalypse, would you still be alive? Colt survived an emergency landing, a...
Wintersfall (Gen-Heirs: The Guardians of Sziveria #1)
Book
A Gen-Heir to her assassin father’s legacy, Katria Nachemir will do almost anything to find the...
Post-Apocalyptic Romance Suspense