Book 3 in the thrilling 7-book Atlantis Saga The US government, the US military, and world-renowned scientists are all after one thing—the Atlantis gene, from the descendants of the lost island of Atlantis. Jaxon’s new life in LA is torture until she hears about a teenage vigilante in the news. Turns out he’s someone she knows from her posh private school. She begins sneaking out of the house to join him in his fight against criminals downtown. General Meade will stop at nothing to defend the world against alien threat and will thwart his own government to be the savior. Meanwhile, the Atlantis Allegiance operates off the grid and has plans to go on a world trip to find the original island of Atlantis. The Atlantis Gene is the 3rd book in the 7-book Atlantis Saga, about the girl with the Atlantis gene.
Book 1: The Atlantis Girl Book 2: The Atlantis Allegiance Book 3: The Atlantis Gene Book 4: The Atlantis Secret Book 5: The Atlantis Origins Book 6: The Atlantis Guard Book 7: The Atlantis Ascent
I still enjoyed the plot of this book, but it feels like the author has begun to lose track of what happened in the first couple of books - the entire context for the greenhouse incident in the first book has changed completely, and yet the consequences of it are still the same. I'm going to keep reading because I want to see where the story will lead, but these inconsistencies are really frustrating!
Jaxon has settled in with her strange, cold foster family in Los Angeles while the government steps up its experimental breeding and training program. And the Atlantis Allegiance makes huge strides in locating more information of the original people. However, all three groups are aimed at an enormous clash. Must keep reading...
Book three of this series is a little slower than the first two. The book is more about the peripheral characters than about Jaxon. it is a necessary step in development of the series.
I don't know if I can finish the series. Each book gets progressively worse - easily predictable, and even though its target audience is probably young adult, the writing just seems to get simpler and less interesting. Not worth a $3.99 value for a 300 page ebook.
Things are getting more intense and everyone making big decissions. I like the way Jaxon is developing, but I hope Otto doesn't get use to doing things the alliance way.