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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN num: 9781934861011
ISBN number: 1934861014
Label: Permuted Press
Manufacturer: Permuted Press
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 312
Printing Date: April 21, 2008
Publishing house: Permuted Press
Sale Popularity Level: 11203
Studio: Permuted Press
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Product Description:
A lot can change in three months: wars can be decided, nations can be forged... or entire species can be brought to the brink of annihilation. The Morningstar Virus, an incredibly virulent disease, has swept the face of the planet, infecting billions. Its hosts rampage, attacking anything that remains uninfected. Even death can't stop the virus-its victims as cannibalistic shamblers. Scattered across the world, embattled groups have persevered. For some, surviving is the pinnacle of achievement. Others hoard goods and weapons. And still others leverage power over the remnants of humanity in the form of a mysterious cure for Morningstar. Francis Sherman and Anna Demilio want only a vaccine, but to find it, they must cross a countryside in ruins, dodging not only the infected, but also the lawless living. The bulk of the storm has passed over the world, leaving echoing thunder and softly drifting ashes. But for the survivors, the peril remains, and the search for a cure is just beginning...
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Rated by buyers
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The second in the Morningstar Saga continues. This was a really fun book. The story continues a few months after the very first book finishes. The flow of this book is just great. The author mixes character development, story, and action very well and has a great ability in never making the book drag out in any of those aspects. You can connect with the characters because they all have their own personalities and make their interactions very fun to read. There is a ton of action in this book and really keeps the story moving very well. I'm a big fan of the authors take on the zombie genre with the infection coming from a virus and the two different type of zombies (sprinters and shamblers). Just a really fun series.
Rated by buyers
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Thunder and Ashes picks up right where it needs to - with the characters we have become attached to trekking through an abyss with teeth in search of that needle in a veritable angry haystack. Here we essentially follow three groups through the nothing that is hope, trying to see what can come out of man's darkest hour. There is our favorite General and his merry band of men (to Z.A. - I absolutely love your people, especially Krueger, because they have so much personality), Anna and her group of two, and - in the end - the remainder of the undead loveboat that we followed in the very first book. The journey is a brutal one, too, and showcases how good people can still do good things in the middle of chaos, how hope can still blossom in a world gone mad, and how fast a runner can move when it wants the taste of (insert person here) on its tongue.
As far as zombie books go, I normally do not find the living the focal point. Normally they are a pit stop for hungry zombie, and I find myself waiting for each one to die slowly. With Z.A's work it is different: here I have become attached to certain people and actually hope they make it out alive. In the raid sequence, for instance, I hoped our friendly neighborhood sharpshooter would find a way to overcome the weight of the world.
That seems odd for me to even type, but it is true.
There are ideas here that work out really nicely as well, with the utilization of zombies not simply working as things that bump about and give chase. The rules have been explained in the very first book for how that works, but the author took that pen and crafted something far deeper than that while working on this book. I appreciated it. I also appreciated something that some people did not seem to like. I enjoyed getting to know my armada of voices, understanding how each saw a world that was turned into nothing. From the political to the unpredictable, it was all there and it was all worth reading. Anyone can write a book with corpses in them - it takes a craftsmen to make people walk through that world in a believable fashion.
As far as recommendations go, read the very first book and then continue on. Both will give you something you want and you will be happy with the result. I normally speed through reads in a day or so because I am just reading but, with this, I took three times the normal amount just so I could taste the air the people were breathing.
Great and then some.
Rated by buyers
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I read the very first book and found it juvenile; the second was slightly better. It would pass as a fair graphic arts book. By the way, vehicles would be ruined running on plane fuel. If you want a real good zombie story, minus the hooha and mega testosterone flush, check out Brian Keene , now thats good zombie reading.
Rated by buyers
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I've had some free time on my hands so I've been catching up on leaving some reviews. I read this book a little after it came out.
It was good. I wished there were more zombies in it but as a character driven story it was great. Anytime you can be with decent characters for more than one book its always fun.
And I have to comment on the African, Suez thing, something about East and West.
Who Cares?
Its a book about the walking dead, the entire book is make believe. the key to enjoying a good book is to not take the work too seriously.
When you look for fault, you will inevitably find it, so knock it off you guys out there and relax and read the book, and if you don't like what your reading, then write your own book and put exactly what you want in it and then come back and wait for all the small-minded people to start picking your passion apart like a weeping sore on a leper.
And if anyone ever reads my reviews, there will never be a bad one because If I didn't like it I will keep my opinion to myself.
Positive is good, people, negative is bad. One person's trash is another one's treasure and books fall into that category.
I'm not talking about the truly horendous books either, I mean the ones that are basically literature.
In conclusion, this was a good book and I am looking forward to part 3. J.H.
Rated by buyers
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I read the very first zombie book by Recht, The Morningstar Strain, and thought it was OK by the standards of the genre. I ordered this sequel when it came out and tried to read it a few weeks ago. I know I'll probably get slammed for writing a negative review, but I the story-telling tension in the very first book just isn't here. I actually enjoyed the very first book: it dealt with the very first outbreaks of the disease in Africa, how it swept the continent and spread throughout the world, and told an engaging story of a group that battled the outbreak as they tried to contain it Africa at the Suez Canal, lost, and then had to flee by ship across the Indian Ocean, then the Pacific to get back to the West Coast of the US. The panic, confusion, combat, the losses, the outbreaks on their ship, their interesting stops in the Phillipines, and then what they find when they get to Oregon was all a pretty decent story.
In this sequel though the magic is gone. The few survivors are trucking across the country but the author depicts an empty country....where are all the corpses, the highways choked with vehicles and zombies? The survivors are also pretty stupid and careless. In one early scene a guy walks into the men's room without clearing the room very first and gets bitten. After all these people went through from Africa to Colorado I just don't think they would be making such stupid mistakes.
Anyway, much as I wanted to like this book as much as the very first one I simply didn't. The storyline was less interesting, the characters were not as intelligent, and I couldn't buy into the depiction of the US. If you like zombie fiction I'd recommend World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War, Day by Day Armageddon (A Zombie Novel), or Dead City. I liked those books a lot better. Or, even better, pick up Infected: A Novel by Scott Sigler. That one will blow your boots off even if it isn't technically a zombie book.
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