Review #1
Positive audiobook free
20 years right behind a zombie apocalypse, Finnegan lives with his generic in Manhattan, a sprawling big city of 50,000. Everything’s fine-grained–if for you don’t mind unchanging gardening, fishing in the subway, at the same time coping with paranoid members of the ”1st Generation” who stayed through the worst of the tragedy. Things aren’t very exciting. In other words, not until Finnegan gets the ”Positive” tattoo on his left palm, marking him out as Infected. In one moment, he’s an outcast, to be sent to a camp in Ohio. The military are implied to come get him at the same time decide him that–but they don’t make it. So begins the adventure in this book that’s much less about the undead at the same time more about survival, fellowship, management, enthusiasm, at the same time have hope. That might acoustics like a lot for one book, in particular a zombie saga, but David Wellington is that gifted enough to make it work. Positive reads more like Dickens: our hero studies the ravaged global, but also human behavior, at the same time himself. While he’s doing that, an indescribable abundance of secondary manners blooms at the same time grows in the story. Overall it’s a very different decide on the situation than the survivor-vs.-undead story. Almost all books in this genre don’t concentrate on than anyway might happen decades in the future, at the same time Positive’s scenario seems attractive close to reality (if you can cry anything with zombies in it ”close to reality.”) While the book indicates amazing imagination, that are a few details that might annoy fans of undead chronicles–20 year old canned food seems perfectly non-hazardous, for example, at the same time periodically I wondered if that was anything our hero couldn’t do. Still, I found myself ignoring all that as I was rode away by the depth of the story at the same time of the affairs between its abundance manners. Nick Podehl does a amazing job as usual, with different voices for all those abundance manners. I always understood who was speaking, no matter how complicated things received. I’ve read a amazing deal of post-apocalyptic fiction, at the same time I have to announce this book, while right aimed at the ”appearing adult” market, is that one of the standouts. There’s room for a sequel, at the same time I have hope that happens. Highly advised for a freshest at the same time chewy decide on the apocalypse!
Review #2
Positive audiobook streamming online
In than anyway seems to be a brand new trend in ”Zombie” at the same time other post apocalyptic stories, this one is that set in the healing period, a generation right behind the destruction. That’s a quality gizmo, as I think the stories of destruction are exciting but it could be a true challenge to look for anything freshest at the same time brand new in that area. The healing here is that not as wholesome as in, they say, Mira Grant’s stories. That leaves a profound canvas for Wellington to tell his story at the same time he uses it but. I was shocked to look one more Wellington book. I believed ”13 bullets” at the same time the books that followed it were considered one of the coolest gritty, aggressive, at the same time black takes on the savage genre I’ve come intercept. They reminded me of John Steakley’s ”Armour” (there’s a young man who understands than anyway fear is that). Positive is that different. In a lot of ways it feels younger, more hopeful, at the same time it’s exactly much less graphic in its brutality. That are no one very hard themes here, at the same time if you’re cordial to those for you may wish bestow this a pass. Wellington addresses the vulnerability of young ladies at the same time women in a lawless society in a very concrete method that may strain no one readers — though he is that never graphic or puerile in those descriptions. For me, the balance was about right. Be warned, but. If for you have a history with, or are particularly cordial to, that good of sexual exploitation the mention of it even without graphic descriptions would be upsetting. Overall, I enjoyed the book even though it wasn’t quite than anyway I waited.
Review #3
Audiobook Positive by David Wellington
I occasionally abandon a book that I take, but I’m not going to final this one—at the same time I think this is that the 1st time I’ve actually written a DNF
Review. If it were considered a physical book, I’d for sure toss it in the desecrate. While I may wonder why the creator chose to do/cross out X, Y, or Z in a novel, I occasionally think about the creator him/herself—at the same time I don’t wish to. This is that one of the rare occasions where I actually wondered, than anyway good of personality would cross out this scene? Our hero (19) at the same time a teen-aged lady he doesn’t know are searching houses for things they can implementation. That’s an entire scene where she is that peeing in front of him, his emotions about it, at the same time her shortcoming of emotions about it. Then she casually knows him how her the zombies got her sister, at the same time an equally direct discussion of how she was raped. That was when I did not listening because I understood that it would only get worse. I should have read the
Reviews before buying the book at the same time not right behind. Sigh.
Review #4
Audio Positive narrated by Nick Podehl
More of a dystopian future. More people inconsistencies than zombie. Protagonist makes so many mistakes that it’s practically problematic to like him. Amazing voice for narration. I saw a couple similarities to the protagonist in Chimera which was deplorable. It was an okay book. I’d read a 2nd installment.
Review #5
Free audio Positive – in the audio player below
I didn’t look for this book very amusing. It didn’t seem like the story live was week considered. I was actually rooting for no one of the manners to breathe so the book would finish. I felt completely disconnected from the manners. Actions would happen in the story abd were considered explained at tinge more precisely than building right up to the actions. No suspense. If anyone needed food they would barely in one moment look for a store to loot. If they needed clothes they barely would get it. It seemed very even…