Another score 5 for this author
How a writer of fiction handles characterization is the first element in whether I decide to read a book all the way through, and whether to give it a good review. The two families we met in The Light, especially Bria and Jonah, at the center of the action, are realistically portrayed and all are sympathetic, separate individuals who are brought together in an unimaginably difficult crisis. However, they discover a forgotten bond that enables them, along with friends and others, to work together for mutual survival in the midst of worldwide death and destruction.
The story begins with a wedding, after which Sara, the one character without a strong connection to the rest, decides to risk the dangerous journey home to find out if her family has survived. All but one of the young adults, including the newlyweds, decide to travel with her. From there the mood is grim as they make their way through miles of ruined homes and ghost towns to find Sara's family. When they reach the city, they encounter Bria's abusive ex-boyfriend who is now second in command of a tyrannical quasi-martial law cadre of brutes, who disarm and imprison the group, and Bria is forced to endure the abuse she thought to have put behind her.
How she outwits him and finds an ally to rescue her friends may keep you awake to the end. Warning: the cliffhanger ending might be frustrating for some, but you knew this book is mid-trilogy, didn't you?