What will you do when the sickness comes knocking?
Kit Easton had struggled her entire life. Things couldn’t possibly have gotten any worse for her… until the day they did. Her mother was dying, her husband had long ago become the enemy, they were down to their last dime, and her daughter had distanced herself to avoid everyone and everything.
When Kit’s sister takes their mother to New York for what is supposed to be a revolutionary, life-saving cure, a disaster no one could have predicted strikes. But it isn’t just Kit’s family that is affected, it rocks the entire world.
Now, with nothing but the help of a neighbor she barely knows, Kit must venture out into the dangerous new world in search of her family. Will she be able to find them before it’s too late?
Kellee L. Greene is a stay-at-home mom to two super awesome and wonderfully sassy children. She loves to read, draw, and spend time with her family when she's not writing. Writing and having people read her books has been a long time dream of hers and she's excited to write more. Her favorite genres are Fantasy and Sci-fi. Kellee lives in Wisconsin with her husband, two kids, and two cats.
At first I thought this one was going to be pretty solid but the longer it went on the more committed the author seemed to be to avoid actual zombie action on the part of her talking "zombies". There was also which was very convenient for that one character to be kept whole and innocent, this kind of overly convenient situations was repeated in various forms throughout the book and it was profoundly eye-roll inducing.
Wow, just like always, Kellee L. Green just jumps right in and captures your undivided attention and doesn't let it go for one minute. Can't wait for book 2!
Every character in this book is totally insufferable. There is no character development for anyone, and we have to wildly guess at their motives. The timeline is shaky at best. I have no idea if I'm supposed to like anyone.
This was okay, the virus and the infected were pretty tame so far and that, coupled with the fact that there is a loooong period of nothing much happening, made it a little mild? for a post-apocalyptic story.
The infected ad the same kinda vibe as zombies but were not as aggressive or dangerous in the whole attack way. I did not hate this, the story isn't bad, but this is not for me.
This is the first book in the four book series. You must read them in order to understand what is going on. I felt this probably could have been just one large book considering the genre. I like the plot and am interested in finding out how this story develops. The characters are good, and I look forward to their development, too. I normally enjoy watching zombie movies more than reading them, but I think I might enjoy reading this one.
I very much enjoyed this book. It had a different premise to others in the genre, which was refreshing. Wished it had been a little longer, but I’m looking forward to reading the next instalment.
I am at 39% of the book and am really really struggling. The writing is good, the story as well BUT the female character ... she is a lazy woman and the opposite of smart and courageous. She is a bloody doormat and dependent on other people, which she takes so far to even remain unhappy, humiliated and degraded because she can’t do nothing on her own. A piss poor and miserable idol for her daughter. I can’t even tell you how low I rank those kind of characters...and am definitely not interested in reading about it, no matter how interesting the storyline. And sentences like this one, don’t make it any easier: ...”The door opened and a man with a chiseled face opened the door.”.... Right.
I need a break from this book, if I ever will pick it up again.
I made it to 71% and now I am done with it. The language and thought process is lacking stimulation and intelligence. The social competence is none existent. They struggled with petty childish problems it was boring. And then there was the main discrepancy of what they were saying and doing. She doesn’t need anyone but hasn’t planned or prepared anything. Not looking up the address on a map, getting protection, packing a bag for a survival and rescue trip, working out how to get there and back without attracting too much attention, not knowing how the infected react and what their abilities are. Nothing. But we get lots of talk of how she can manage that all, whatever it is. Then there is the talk the men do, about planning and preparing everything beforehand, when in actuality they also did nothing. But stare out a window and discussing childish emotional hormone fused problems a teenager would experience and not grown up people.
The plot was interesting in theory, the characters boring and immature, while actually nothing much happens at all besides an amateur dash in the wide open towards the house opposite Blake’s. Wow!!!
I wanted to like this, but it’s a bit of a train wreck. It could have used better editing (proofreading for the extra words and weird formatting; developmental edits for the poor characterization, lack of motivation/ development of secondary characters and the rushed ending). I hated the main character, Kit, she was literally too weak/stupid to love, and trying to build a romance with a neighbor who killed her abusive husband mid way through the book left me cringing. Kit literally had zero redeeming qualities that made me want to root for her. She was by turns, a doormat, an absent mother, a manipulator and so unaffected by her abusive husband’s death that it was weird. I think the author worked far too hard to make Freddie a villain (he was practically a stereotype) and not hard enough to make me care about her heroine. And trying to create a romance between her and the strange neighbor who shot the abusive husband was just…weird. Awkward, uncomfortable. Cringey. And really made the main character look shallow and superficial.
There were several problems with time and distance between cities and within the ‘small’ town that were problematic for me and felt very contrived. The ‘big reveal’ at the end wasn’t any big surprise because it was pretty glaring when no one was stepping over him when they went back for supplies. Beta readers should have caught a lot of this, so overall, for me this missed the mark. The book received two stars because it is complete and coherent.
It was super boring but the zombies were interesting enough for me to get to the ending. Felt like i wasted my time. Kit doesn't feel like a 30 or 40-something mother, she just feels like a typical mid 20s woman that happens to have a teen daughter.
Whitney was super annoying. The love interest and his brother are okay, but boring. The daughter got over pretty quickly.
I want my wasted time back. But I'll check out the second book to see if it's any better.
Barely any mention of the infected description wise and next to no encounters with them at all apart from driving by and a couple of brief physical encounters that were a few lines long at most, at least 90% of the story was devoted to reminding the reader the main character suffered from domestic violence which is fine to build up a character ls back story but not an entire book almost
Kit: and Maddie. They will l die because their stupidity. Going to drive to Maine over 1100 miles battling the sick and the violent survivors. Whitney. Hateful. Self centered. Nasty. The brothers. The peacekeepers. The prepared. The level headed. The title says this is a survival thriller. It is hard to read a book where the main characters are dense and this side of killing themselves.
I enjoyed the book but some of the characters need to think before they talk.