Ok, I get the whole make a series out of a story, so you can sell more books thing, but I honestly don't understand why this story wasn't wrapped up in the first (and imo only) book. There's more story to tell, but only because the author took a 300 page book, and turned it into multiple books. What we see here is the Wheel of Time effect. Not necessary, and (again, imo) makes the story more irritating than anything else. There's plenty that could have been left out of this one to progress the story enough that it could have finished in this single book. I don't mind a good story, but when an author expands a story for the express purpose of making it multiple books instead of telling a good story, then it makes me seriously contemplate not bothering to read the rest of the series just out of spite. (I never did read the last book in the Game of Thrones series because of this nonsense), and now I'm seriously considering whether I should continue to read the second book in this series. I likely will, just because I hate to see unfinished series on my read shelf, but it frustrates me when authors take a perfectly good story, adds filler, then makes multiple books out of something that shouldn't be an entire series. This story was an ok story, but I think it would have been an excellent one had the author stuck to a single book and just made the story about the main character and his goals, and his (eventual) success. In this book, the main character's goals are always laid out, but they are given very little air time. A lot of this book is glossing over the kind of details that would have made the story more interesting. Flashbacks that should have been entire chapters, and entire chapters that should have been a couple of sentences.. It's not a bad story, but I believe it could have been an excellent story with the proper cutting and editing, and without the additional expansion forcing extra books in the series.
If that sort of thing doesn't bother you, then you're likely to enjoy this offering is post apocalyptic fiction is your thing, but for me, it's more like the carrot hung on a stick in front of the donkey to keep it moving forward.
This story tries to be a deathlands clone, and it fails completely.
It is not a story that makes a good series unless it was designed from the start to be such, and this story was not, so it just drags along in places, skips large chunks in others, and generally leaves one with a sense of being unfinished.
I give it three stars anyway, because on the whole, I like the story, I just don't like how it was done.