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With the aid of a canine brigade, can a charade keep the apocalypse away? Author A.R. Shaw delivers another far too plausible post-apocalyptic scenario challenging human survival.
Sloane Delaney struggles to keep her daughters safe in an apocalyptic dawn. Aided by a pack of abandoned dogs, they maintain a dangerous charade to keep looters at bay.
But then, corrupt agents arrive, threatening their hard-won sense of security. Fleeing for a safe haven, Sloane doesn't count on trusting a stranger.
A. R. Shaw's books are recommended for fans of A. G. Riddle's Winter World, Michael Crichton's A Case of Need, Douglas E. Richards' Split Second, Steven Konkoly's Hot Zone, James Rollins' The Seventh Plague, Stephen King's The Stand, Justin Cronin's The Passage, Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven, Jean Hegland's Into the Forest, Pierce Brown's Red Rising and Nora Roberts' Year One, and Matthew Mather's CyberStorm.
Unbound: Dawn of Deception book 1 Not quite what I expected Decent start to the series. It was a good book with good characters. It was a strange way for the apocalypse to start and not quite believable. It is good enough to buy and read. I would buy again. <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Undone: Dawn of Deception book 2 Getting better The series continues and seems to get better. The characters continue to grow. New characters help guide the story to help us understand that the situation is bigger than expected. <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Unbeaten: Dawn of Deception book 3 Finally done The series was okay, but Iam glad it is over. The good guys win over the one bad guy. Seems odd that one guy could rule like that but it has happened throughout history. As stated before, I would buy the series again.
Well written, well edited, mostly clean with violence and torture but none of a sexual assault or nature. The strong female character who grows as the story does. I really enjoyed it.
Whew! That was intense. Sometimes it was a bit too realistic of a portrayal, showing what humanity could become when security and convenience are stripped from life as we know it. Even so, that same sense of reality and desperation are what kept me reading.