Brief synopsis (no spoilers):
The end of the world has arrived. About 99 percent of the world dropped dead in one instant, and the only people left alive are a small number of misfits who are all young, and all have something in common. But beyond that one thing, they couldn't be much more different.
Category:
YA Fiction, I believe
Why I chose this book:
Amazon First
My personal opinion:
This story is pretty good. I really like the premise (End of the world, what do the survivors do?), and I really like that the story addresses all kinds of things that most post-apocalyptic stories don't: cadavers, food chains, supplies, utilities going out slowly. I wish there were less "romance" (not really romantic, it's just teens "doing it") because it got to be a bit overwhelming/too frequent. I like that someone non-neurotypical was in a featured position, and a hero.
Warnings
Language: Mild and infrequent
Violence: Not exactly
"Adult" situations: Many, many references, but none with detail
Death: Yes, including major character(s)
Movie rating equivalent:
Bordering on R, depending on who directs
Protagonist description:
Dev is autistic, Aspergarian, to be specific; Lucy is southern and has strong opinions; Mohammed renames himself to Marcus as part of his journey
Point of view of story:
Third, focused on one person at a time
Book length:
Medium
Story flow:
Superb
Grammar and spelling issues:
None
Character connection (no spoilers):
None
For series:
Independent or integral:
Assuming integral
Series review as a whole:
Decent so far. It won't be on my "greatest hits" list, but I might buy the next book
If you only have time for one, read:
Happy Doomsday
The end of the world has arrived. About 99 percent of the world dropped dead in one instant, and the only people left alive are a small number of misfits who are all young, and all have something in common. But beyond that one thing, they couldn't be much more different.
Category:
YA Fiction, I believe
Why I chose this book:
Amazon First
My personal opinion:
This story is pretty good. I really like the premise (End of the world, what do the survivors do?), and I really like that the story addresses all kinds of things that most post-apocalyptic stories don't: cadavers, food chains, supplies, utilities going out slowly. I wish there were less "romance" (not really romantic, it's just teens "doing it") because it got to be a bit overwhelming/too frequent. I like that someone non-neurotypical was in a featured position, and a hero.
Warnings
Language: Mild and infrequent
Violence: Not exactly
"Adult" situations: Many, many references, but none with detail
Death: Yes, including major character(s)
Movie rating equivalent:
Bordering on R, depending on who directs
Protagonist description:
Dev is autistic, Aspergarian, to be specific; Lucy is southern and has strong opinions; Mohammed renames himself to Marcus as part of his journey
Point of view of story:
Third, focused on one person at a time
Book length:
Medium
Story flow:
Superb
Grammar and spelling issues:
None
Character connection (no spoilers):
None
For series:
Independent or integral:
Assuming integral
Series review as a whole:
Decent so far. It won't be on my "greatest hits" list, but I might buy the next book
If you only have time for one, read:
Happy Doomsday
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