I'm a bit of a sucker for post-apocalyptic and generic-muscle-man-heads-clueless-group-of-survivors stories. Even though I've seen it done a million times, if you get a good cast of characters and keep the tensions high, I'll be there eating out of the palm of your hand.
The first I ever heard of Bunker: Born to Fight was seeing it available as a free audiobook on YouTube. I was bored at work, and put it on. Born to Fight is post-apocalyptic and has a generic muscle head named Jack Bunker who adopts a woman (who has just been divorced from her abusive husband) and her young son as they set out to survive after an EMP takes out the train they all happened to be riding on.
However, I can't say it has a good cast of characters, nor does it have satisfying tension. Jack makes for a pretty dull protagonist. He's a muscle head, he has some dark past he's running from . . . yep that's his entire personality. Stephanie, I think that's her name, is the epitome of the "obnoxious female tag along." Her character was already in question when the book began, but after hearing lines like "I can't help it if I'm prettier than other women," making demands that Bunker take her and her son along with him, and whining selfishly when he talks about leaving on his own as if she has any say over his life as practical strangers, her character just took a nosedive for me and I don't think she can be redeemed. The author tries to make her out to be a good mom, but with the way she's written (and her kid too) it kind of backfires as pandering. It really feels like the author just couldn't get in the mind of a woman, because she's written terribly. Some writers can portray other genders well, some just can't.
The plot suffers from drama. Born to Fight really feels like a soap opera with a mid season cliffhanger where an EMP goes off just to spice things up. It drags out saving the kids from the bus accident for far too long, and the author came up with some weird excuses for the Main characters to strip off their clothes just so they can see each other a bit naked. I'm partway into the next book and Jack's hardly in it. Toward the end of BTF, the story ends up taking the characters back to Stephanie's home town which she was trying to escape and we spend a lot of time with a bunch of unlikeable characters for . . . some reason. Yeah, they're probably important to the plot, but they can be around without the author forcing us into their gross head space. I don't need to read from their perspective to know they exist and might effect the plot later, because so far they're not doing a whole lot other than annoying me.
Someone in the comment section pointed out that the series felt like one book stretched out into a series just to make more money and I'm starting to believe that. Born to Fight ends very abruptly and feels more like an episodic end point, than a novel finale.
Additional complaints:
-Too much description of characters and locations that aren't all that important, dragging the story out unnecessarily.
-A national crisis that isn't treated with much fear.
-Obnoxious female characters who stomp their feet and get their way.
-A few technical inaccuracies
-Characters jumping to conclusions normal people wouldn't jump too (Not talking about the EMP. Talking about everything else.)
-Hate books where the cover straight up lies. Nowhere does Jack ever don military garb or ever use a gun. If anything the cover should have Jack shirtless wearing booty jean shorts standing on top of a school bus while Stephanie pouts in the corner.
Yeah, the only thing this book did for me was alleviate some boredom.