A European, female perspective: I'm interested in prepping, but I am definitely no admirer of the USA and its corporation run government. As a Euro, you simply have to swallow hard and decide not to get irritated at the American exceptionalist outlook of the author. It's worth it, in my opinion, for anyone with an interest in prepping.
Plot
: This is where the strength of this series lies. How does a man with a prepping background take care of his family and neighbours after an EPI attack? Partly, this can be read as a prepping manual with concrete examples.
Language
: I'm not even a native English speaker, but can pick up on grammatical and stylistic errors. The story telling is done in a very basic completely chronological fashion. Lots of American jargon. This book will fall below the minimum stylistic standards for some. But having a literary experience is not the reason why you pick this book up in the first place.
Observations
: The female characters feel very shallow or sketchy, although the author goes out of his way to convey the proponent, Morgan, thinks that women too can shoot and handle weapons. There is lots of talk about particular brand-name products that Morgan is using. He must have been a VIP customer with internet prepping businesses prior to the fallout event.
The federal US government is very much the bad guys, in fine US prepper tradition. I never really got a good feel for what precisely the US army was doing in this series -- suffice to say, it was not good!
Recommended for
: People with an interest in prepping, or anyone concerned about a breakdown of society.