Jason Sterling had a simple life by all accounts. He had worked the same job his entire adult life, he had never married and he had no children. He was used to doing things on his own. His comfortable life was shaken to the core the day he learned of his fathers death. It was a mysterious meeting that set life altering events in motion and the allure of a new life was too great to walk away from. When an Electromagnetic Pulse brings the modern world to its knees, Jason's choice proves to be the right one.
Excerpt
I have been told by many people that I have lived an extraordinary life. While the past few years have been a wild ride, I don’t think that I would go that far. I would be more inclined to say that I have been very blessed. The people who I’ll introduce you to, they were the extraordinary ones. I was just lucky enough to call them my friends. In order to keep the memories alive of the ones that we lost along the way; I have decided to put pen to paper. It is in their memory that I tell you this story. My name is Jason Sterling and my incredible journey began on July 9th, 2015. That was the day I learned that my father had passed away. I was 38 years old and had been working at the same warehouse job for 20 years in Reno, Nevada. I had started there the summer I graduated from high school and the place just kind of stuck with me. Over the years I had risen through the ranks, from picker packer to shift lead. Then from shift lead to warehouse supervisor, then to supply chain manager. That was the position I had been in for the last five years. Retirement wasn't even a thought yet. Hell, I was only 38, who the hell retires at 38? So, every day I went to work. I was there at 5am and left after the second shift came on at 2:30pm. I liked to have contact with all my people. Maybe that’s why I was a successful manager. It's not that I really liked the job, I was just good at it and to be honest, I was comfortable. I had bigger plans for when I did decide to retire. Having never been married and having no kids, I had a lot of options open to me. The one option I was looking at was a huge log cabin in northern Montana. I loved the log cabin look and the idea of retiring and telling civilization to piss off was a feeling I felt more and more every day. At 6'-2" tall, I maintained an average weight of 195 with a pretty chiseled physique. I tried to do my hour every morning in the gym. After that, I was in the shower by 4:20 and on my way to work by 4:45. It was only a five-minute drive to work. That was the normal routine and had been every workday for years. I was always the first person at work, so I was a little surprised when I pulled in to find the Plant Manager’s car and a black limo in the parking lot. From outside I could see that the office lights were already on, my office light included. "Hmm, must be a surprise visit from corporate," I muttered to myself as I grabbed my briefcase and headed for the front door. I had been through these surprise inspections before, so I wasn't about to let it change my routine. In the front door, past the forklift charging stations and into the employee break room. It was a habit of mine to always start the coffee pots. I knew my people liked coming into work with hot coffee waiting for them. That done, I headed to my office. Let’s see who we had to impress today. Daryl, the plant manager, was in his office but the door was closed, so I proceeded to my office which was two doors down. My door was also closed, and I could see light spilling from under it. I stood there for a second or two trying to figure exactly what to do. Do I knock on my own office door? Do I just barge in like I own the place? This was a first.
This book was such a fun ride! The set-up is every prepper’s dream, fortified ranch, stockpiled resources, and a crew ready to defend it when the world collapses.
There were two types of survivors after the EMP. There were those like us, the ones who did what they could to help others. Then there were those who did what they could to exploit others.
The story starts small but really takes off with the last stretch being packed with an intense battle scene. Definitely ott at times, but I enjoyed it all the same. Suuuuper violent, so know that going in.
Issues:
There are a few rough edges, some plot holes, and WAY too many characters to track in the second half. I kept wondering why they didn’t have any dogs? They’re such a crucial part of first-line security. I also would have loved more details about the everyday side of survival, farming, canning, gardening, those aspects were barely discussed.
I’m still wondering who set all of this in motion, but maybe that will come out in the next book.
Tropes/themes: EMP apocalypse Collapse of modern society Prepper’s paradise/survivalist fantasy Mysterious inheritance Found family Military strategy Badass woman co-leader Overwhelming odds So many side characters Tiny romance, but it worked here HFN...
Overall, this story is fast-paced, is action/violence-heavy, and balanced with a badass woman co-leading. Despite the issues, I was totally entertained.
Side note. *I get why some readers may be irritated by a character’s political leanings, but I don’t need every character to reflect my own worldview. For me, this is military fiction at its best. What stood out most was that this author created one of the BEST female characters I’ve come across in the genre, she’s fierce, capable, and absolutely kicks ass. In fact, she’s the one training the hero. There’s also a small love story here, which made my romantic heart happy.
Thanks for the recommendation, Dan. I really should have read this one sooner!
This story had potential as the overall plot and some of the characters were decent (Jason and Jill and the Major), but there were some issues that kept me from really enjoying it. First, the amount of effort over many years that it took to set up the compound and they didn't see that they did not have enough people to sustain it going forward? It took an unaware neophyte to get them on track? Second, the dialog needed a lot of work. For one thing, it was awkward and not at all like most people talk and there was too much run-on dialog, back and forth to the extent it was often a challenge as to who was saying what. Third, there is way, way too much detail on the weapons and equipment. It did nothing to enhance the story and everything to slow it down. Fourth, the extreme right wing bias was just BS. Really, "liberal pansy", "TSA goons", describing liberalism as a mental disorder? Those sentiments are ridiculous and no more valid than calling conservatives uneducated, right-wing nuts. That alone will keep me from reading the next book. If I want lame insults towards liberals, I will watch FOX news.
Well written story with a lot of action and characters. Normally a lot of characters in a book becomes confusing, but this author took the time and words to flesh them out so that they become real to the reader. I enjoyed this story and look forward to the next book in the series.
Excellent!!! I hardly ever ever give 5 stars to any books that i read but I had to for this one. I have read probably over 100 EMP books and this was excellent. It kept me glued to the book and thinking about it all day long until I could get back to it. I was so enthralled as to this Ranch and its set up. And i loved all the detail of this Ranch too. And I appreciated the mild language and some bad but used in understandable circumstances. And I appreciated the decency of the couple Jason and Jill and not having all that "most authors" seem to like to put in. We all know what goes on behind closed doors. I am going to re-read this book before I think about the second book because I just can't believe book two could be better than this first book. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and was also pleased that it had an ending that satisfied me. GOOD BOOK.
A real interesting view of, "what If." You were so excited that you couldn't slowdown to put all of your words on the screen. I really can relate. I am in my seventies and reading is the only activity that I can enjoy without raising my pain level. I am not complaining because I have had a very active life and had a lot of fun busting myself up so I don't want any pitty. Now I get my excitement from reading three or four books a week. I think that this is number 90 so far this year.It
A storyline unlike any others. Characters you will either hate, love or shoot! Menta!ly! Non stop excitement, a story telling and wearing together that is I my exceeded by Native tellers. You are going to love this if you love post apocalyptic stories..so real you will live and breathe it with them. I love the Ranch. I only have one complaint. I can't read fast enough! Buy it, own it, keep it. You will be a part of the Ranch family forever!
In response to a major catastrophe, a group of people come to live in a socialist commune where everyone does what they can to help the group survive and prosper. They take care of their own regardless of how much they can contribute, making accommodations for those who may be sick injured or otherwise indisposed. Somehow, this story takes a hard right-wing turn as the main character disparages the very type of society they built and used to survive.
How do you rate a book. There will be people that won't read the whole book. I really did enjoyed the book. Stuck in the house because of convid19 lock down. Not an EMP, but sure change everything.
A right wing prepper's fantasy. A guy inherits a "secret" ranch with unlimited hard core military capabilities, medical, houses, barracks, security surveillance, food stores and kitchens, underground water aquifers, hundreds of cattle, security gates, guard houses, fuel etc... All redundant and duplicated.
Of course, there is an expert team living at this ranch that understands, medicine and surgery, military training, ranching, farming, mechanical, electrical, plumbing etc..
Of course there is a college educated, combat trained beautiful blonde woman just waiting at the ranch for the protagonist to show up. Shades of Louis L'Amour. Arrrrgh!!
As I read this, I felt my IQ dropping page by page. I gave it two stars only because the shootout portion with the bad guys towards the end was semi interesting.
I'm going to stop writing now and go dig a fox hole in my backyard.
Except for language, I would have given this book a 5. I know, I know, realistically there would be language in these circumstances, but ummmm.... maybe not quite so much? A great story, and I've started the 2nd book in the series. Not only entertaining, but informative as well.
I'm about halfway thru the book and I'm not sure I will finish. The characters are without flaw, perfect bodies, perfect abilities, perfect tastes, sun shine and roses for everybody. Perfect daddy leaving perfect son a perfect ranch. Running 500 head of cattle on 3000 acres. In northern NV... Plus farming on that, with no mention of where the water is coming from. Apparently, it takes these wonderful people with great taste in whiskey 8 hours to ride around a little less than 5 square miles.
Editing errors always annoy me, since one person proofreading should've caught a bunch of them. Donned / dawned or reins / reigns Grammar errors, missing commas.
Now, I'm at the part, where the super folks at the Ranch rescued the sheriffs department of Elko county. And the deputies just happily go to riding those strenuous security shifts there, with never a thought or regret about abandoning the 10,000 residents of the county.
I made the mistake of buying the three books in this series, and book one was very disappointing. The last thing I want to read is someone who pats himself on the back for being a conservative and putting down Liberals. It is sad that he would use this book series to promote racism. Shame on you.
Really enjoyed this book. OK, so it missed a few commas, misused a few words and some sentences may have been awkwardly constructed. It is the story that counts though and this is supposed to be an action-adventure, survivalist, post-apocalyptic novel, not literature 101.
I realize that there are three books in this series, but this could well have been a good stand alone novel. I enjoy books like this and have read many and avoided many other of them. Do I like the character/characters? Is the situation the characters find themselves in even half-way believable? If yes, I will read on; if not, on to another book.
Remember the 10-book 299-Days series by Glen Tate? The first nine are old friends. I never read the tenth one. Remember the 10-book Going Home series by A. American? Again, the first nine are old friends and I never read the tenth one. Remember The Clash-of-Civilizations trilogy by Lee Boyland? Never read the 1st book, but the second and third one are old friends. What I am trying to say is that I may or may not read books two and three of this series. But this book -- book 1 -- is going to be an old friend.
You've heard of the peanut gallery. In the old days of vaudeville, most of the heckling and booing came from here. Most of the reviews both here and on Amazon seem to be honest reviews. You like it or you don't like it and that is your privilege. But there are also the "political" reviews from those folks in the peanut gallery. One reviewer on Amazon ranted on and on about the right-wing Christian beliefs on display. I don't think Sean Liscom mentioned religion, not even once. Even when Jason and Jill were married, it was major Jackson, a combat army officer who officiated. These peanut gallery folks are recognizable by the mean-spirited 1 or 2 star reviews they give and by the myriad snide comments about "extreme right-wing bias," and "describing liberalism as a mental disorder." etc. etc. We get enough of this from our news media and our politicians. I have to wonder why people on the left bother to read survivalist/distopian books like this if they get so much indigestion from doing so.
Anyway, this was a good read. It was suspenseful, action packed, and imaginative, and nowhere near as filled with military terminology as some survivalists books are. Ok, so it mentioned a M249 light machine gun or a 5-ton truck. You had only to google the terms to find their meaning. Another reviewer grumbled about "macho crap." Funny, many of the characters in this story cried, or were bewildered, or were hurt, or were killed in this book. All of the inhabitants of the Ranch were good people, and were willing to go out of their way to help their fellow man. None of them were supermen or superwomen. Macho? Even the bad guys weren't "macho."
One thing I did wonder about, though. With only 3 or 4 people on the ranch, who did all the cleaning, cooking, and washing? Not to mention, who shovelled the stalls clean in the horse barn? Oh, well -- mysteries keep life interesting and it's still a very good book. :-D
I took some notes while reading and while I didn’t even made it through the first chapter, the notes list grew longer... I really struggled through “The meeting” and “The ride” part of the first chapter. It started out intriguing but the combination of growing up with an absent father and now facing his mysterious inheritance didn’t keep me hooked for long. I found it frustrating to read and there weren’t much hooks to counteract the annoying preferred way the author used to keep it a total mystery by Bill and his “I would have to kill you” attitude. Which turned out in “The Ranch” part of chapter 1 to be totally unnecessary as they didn’t keep it really a secret in the county around. There weren’t just any incentives for me to go along with it like our main character. I was glad we finally arrived at the Ranch after this unnecessary cloak and dagger operation and I was finally looking forward that the curtain would be lifted but it turned out, “The Ranch” part reads more like an inventory list than an imaginary adventure to discover the place and the reasons behind all this. All this listing of interior design, the supplies and materials used forced me to scroll through the whole shebang. This should have been integrated into the story and not like this...And again with the unnecessary secrecy and the reasons given for starting to build this place are not really believable and justified to have abandoned your children. I am not sure I will last much longer. It is very tedious to read.
Dnf- 57% Not the worst of the genre, just can't go on. Life is too short. Bunch of things bugged me.
Like why are they spending full days in the security shack and patrolling before anything has happened ? There are only 2 of them living there. Seriously! Stop complaining there is no one to plant crops, stop patrolling for no reason and do it!
Also, Jill and Mark( I think) were watching Jason. But they both have other jobs! And how was Jill watching him if she was living at the ranch being trained by Walter and attending schools for 5 years.
Right after the EMP Susan is going to start manning the infirmary full time. Why? There are only around 15 people and no one is hurt!?
Regular guy, warehouse manager, kills a bunch of guys and thinks nothing of it.
So weird and unrealistic! The meeting to debrief ("debrief!" Who says that?) after Jill was shot. Everyone had notepads and pens. Please! The author is writing this like it is the military when none of the characters, except Jake, were in the military. " Since Mark was the executive officer on this mission..." seriously reads like a bunch of boys playing they are in the military.
Can't go on.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Shew! What a great book! I got totally wrapped up in it! It was almost unbelievably impossible! Yet the author made it seem real! I really enjoyed The Legacy Series Book 1. I am excited to read the other six already available.
I think my favorite thing about this book is the focus on community. On ALL communities. And on the future. I absolutely abhor books that go on and on about the ugly side of things. There is a great deal of ugly portrayed in this book but the goodness wins!
I would absolutely recommend this book to anyone. There is some language but no on page intimacy. I do want to warn you that there are brief references to bad guys doing bad things, inducing intimate violence. MOST of the details are not included and none of it happens on the pages. The only reference to anything on scene is when a bunch of prisoners are saved from the bad guys and some of the things found are mentioning but not in detail.
I’ve read several post-apocalyptic genre stories over the last ten years, ranging from those that were laughably implausible to scarily realistic. The Ranch falls heavily on the realistic side. This first book in the Legacy Series does an excellent job of developing the main characters from their backgrounds to their current abilities and personal frailties. Along with presenting a story built around an EMP attack and the rapid degradation of societal norms, there is the element of violent action that one can only assume to be a result of the loss of society’s structure and norms. While there were several predictable scenes, there were just as many things occurring that were unexpected, giving the reader a high level of entertainment. I believe as time permits, I’ll be using my Kindle Unlimited account to read the rest of this series.
I love a good EMP, and what started out as a semi-interesting plot pretty quickly devolved into a terrible book. The macho shit and going to the gym every morning at 3 am is ridiculous and annoying but forgivable. I agree that the right-wing bent is a deal-breaker though. And the dialog is abysmal. You have these down-home, beer-chugging militia men speaking the queen's English, like a contraction (of the grammatical kind) might turn them into a liberal pansy (like the cocaine-snorting lefties they run off the compound.) It looks like it's all been said before, but I also have to add how inconsistent Jill is. The scene where she goes over to the other military troop that's taking refuge at the ranch for a few days and flirts and shows her cleavage to get intel is just trashy and out of character. I'm trying to finish it to see if anything interesting happens, but I sincerely doubt I'll be reading any more in this series.
Where to start with this first of a 6-book series... It is a very interesting premise, for sure. Inheriting a prepper's dream would suit about anyone interested in survival things. But the writing is so terrible, the typos so numerous, and the character development so weak, it all just falls apart too quickly, and this story becomes mired in its severe disability as to be taken seriously as a work of fiction. How many times must the author tell us the main character is taking a shower? How many times must the author tell us the main character is drinking coffee? And for the love of God, how many times must the reader be subject to this author's dire need of editing software as a bare minimum? At least, Mr. Liscom, educate yourself on the usage of the apostrophe! It was mind boggling to see so many grammatical errors in a finished book, but a 6th grader could have figured out how the usage of the apostrophe affects the flow of sentences. All in all, a wonderful story in and of itself, but the sheer number of typographical errors just destroy this book. Editing your work should not be such a bother.
This book has a whole lot of intrigue and spunk to it. It pulled a mid level manager to an isolated ranch his father he didn't know well had set up. Then learning this ranch was set up for various end time survival and being self sufficient to actually having to go through those end time scenarios it was one that was hard to put down. While I think some of it is maybe a little bit far out for what could happen in the US, it is a good thing to think of for planning and what if scenarios and making sure that the good guys should always stay prepared and work to help others.
I have read a number of books in the apocalypse category this novel falls under. This book is better than most.
This work was a very enjoyable read. The plot was interesting but there are a few problems with it. There was a limited amount of swearing in some action scenes. All this being said, it did keep me up later than I expected as I would tell myself, one more chapter, read just one more chapter then go to sleep.
I would like to tell the author that there are far more weapons than the AR-15 and AK-47s with 1911 model pistols. Even with more weapons and different configurations, they were still poor choices for the fighting being done.
You never know what to expect when reading an apocalyptic thriller. This book was excellent in that it had engaging characters, good and realistic plotline, and just some good old ordinary heroes. It was fun and engaging for me as a reader and caused some self examination. It's hard to think of the lawlessness that would rear its ugly head in desperate times. The main recurring theme was history repeats itself and the next disaster is around the corner, am I prepared? I read this post Covid and I remember the empty store shelves! This a recommended read in my opinion.
I have read many post apocalyptic style books and most fall on their face pretty quick. Usually someone tries to write about preppers, weapons, what is going to be needed or not but generally misses because they have no real firsthand knowledge.
This book starts quick with only a minor suspension of belief needed to follow along and enjoy the ride. Yes there are parts you just have to smile and say, yeah whatever, but overall a good read and setup for future books. Extra half star for not once calling a magazine a clip.
I thought the book was an ok read, a bit unrealistic, but I’m running out of TEOTWAWKI books to read so, meh. I had to stop as soon as I saw the term “raging liberal.” This author did his research well on certain topics in the book but evidently didn’t bother on finding out what ‘liberalism’ actually means. If he had, then maybe he would have written certain characters differently. This book was a DNF for me, which is a shame since it wasn’t too bad until the author chose to insert his own political narrative into the story.
I will start by saying I was hesitant in getting this book. End of the world “stuff” is not my normal read. That said, the characters in the book drew me in and kept me going. Yes, some far fetched prepping was done here but the author was sure to create a character for each type of “talent” required to create the Ranch. Having a military background myself I was able to wrap my head around a smaller force rising to meet the challenges of superior numbers. I’ll be starting book 2 with hope of it being as entertaining.
Jason Sterling had a simple life by all accounts. He had worked the same job his entire adult life, he had never married and he had no children. He was used to doing things on his own. His comfortable life was shaken to the core the day he learned of his fathers death. It was a mysterious meeting that set life altering events in motion and the allure of a new life was too great to walk away from. When an Electromagnetic Pulse brings the modern world to its knees, Jason's choice proves to be the right one.