The Stronghold continues the 299 Days story with the development of the main town, some development of the lesser characters that are building their own extended households, and more information on the situation in the major cities without effective law enforcement.
We see the main town and some of the lesser characters' locations pull together for security in their respective locations. All of the security is done the same way, though: guard the front gate. There are a couple of other small ideas as well, that I'll leave to your discovery as you read through the books.
In The Stronghold we get another dodge of a big battle. We see some people from the main town go to the neighboring, larger town for supplies and get a good picture of how the author believes things will go in larger towns during a major, long-term breakdown.
Some of these lesser locations start to develop a bit more. We get more information on a functioning family farm with long term guests (the main character's co-workers from The Collapse). The main character's pre-collapse community falls lower as it is led by a semi-psychotic big government resident. A glimpse is presented into the state government workings from the view of a loyalty torn public information mouthpiece. A couple other locations are described along with the how those local economies function with and without government assistance.
The main town's community meetings continue and the main character continues to verbally spar with a man and his followers who disagree. It seems as if the author uses this antagonist as an outlet to explain some of the things he believes, forgoing the need for an all-knowing narrator talking to the reader. For the most part this works, with some awkward moments that don't seem like interactions real people would have.
The books, this one included, end in cliffhangers, reminiscent of the One Thousand and One Arabian Nights. Oh, well. It doesn't hurt anything.
OK, now I wait for the next two books to be released.
The author's blog and the story homepage.
Showing posts with label The Preparation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Preparation. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Book Review: 299 Days:The Community by Glen Tate
Our story picks up, of course, where it left off in the last book, The Collapse. The family and immediate community (hence the title) start to pull together.
The author takes us through his vision of some occurrences in the local area. The main group goes to "town" and split up to gather supplies, finding most things very expensive. Fuel, groceries, household goods, are twice the normal price or more and many of the local businesses are rationing sales. We see most people not taking the collapse seriously and not even thinking about stocking up on longer term items. Lines are starting to be drawn as the larger area town divides itself into areas racially.
In The Collapse we start to see some of the minor characters that lived or worked with the main character break off into multiple smaller side-stories of the main plot. Perhaps the author will bring them back together somehow later in the story, or maybe they will remain separate and will just be used to demonstrate how other areas around our main town suffer and/or thrive in different ways.
Still no "action" in the sense of gunfights. The author continues to feint at action like a man playing in traffic; he'll stand in the lane and jump away at the last moment before being hit by a car. (There's my poor literary analogy for today, but reading the first few books it will make sense)
The main character begins his journey as a leader in the small town near his new home. He and a permanent resident of that town start to form a leadership group and plan the safety of the area.
OK, enough for now. The story is still good. I'm still reading.
299days website
The author takes us through his vision of some occurrences in the local area. The main group goes to "town" and split up to gather supplies, finding most things very expensive. Fuel, groceries, household goods, are twice the normal price or more and many of the local businesses are rationing sales. We see most people not taking the collapse seriously and not even thinking about stocking up on longer term items. Lines are starting to be drawn as the larger area town divides itself into areas racially.
In The Collapse we start to see some of the minor characters that lived or worked with the main character break off into multiple smaller side-stories of the main plot. Perhaps the author will bring them back together somehow later in the story, or maybe they will remain separate and will just be used to demonstrate how other areas around our main town suffer and/or thrive in different ways.
Still no "action" in the sense of gunfights. The author continues to feint at action like a man playing in traffic; he'll stand in the lane and jump away at the last moment before being hit by a car. (There's my poor literary analogy for today, but reading the first few books it will make sense)
The main character begins his journey as a leader in the small town near his new home. He and a permanent resident of that town start to form a leadership group and plan the safety of the area.
OK, enough for now. The story is still good. I'm still reading.
299days website
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Book Review: 299 Days:The Preparation by Glen Tate
The first in a ten book series being released two at a time every few months. As I write this, the first four are out there. The story's website: 299days.com has more detailed information about the author and how he came to write the story.
I have only read The Preparation so far. It is 257 pages (not including the bonus chapter (see the website for details of those gems)). The Preparation is the scene setup for the actions to come. It focuses on the political, economic, and social circumstances that exist in these United States and the author's neighborhoods. These circumstances lead to a partial collapse of the government and society in general.
The author touts his story as different because in his story there is only a "partial" collapse and not a "total" collapse as most of the other novels in this genre portray. Like the Deep Winter series, this first book is a "how to" on prepping for disaster. Time is spent explaining how to obtain and store food, how to open the "prepping/survivalist" conversation with others, how to find a group of like minded individuals, where to find information you might need, as well as other topics on the subject. It's not bad, it's just that the real-life instructions are awkwardly placed. The author pauses his story to tuck in valuable information for the reader.
The Preparation is written in third person style, but is clearly otherwise in autobiographical style with a stop at the author's childhood memories, a brief stop during his 20's, then the extended stay at current events. The writing style is quite plain; the author doesn't have or didn't use the eloquence displayed by professional authors like King or Koonts. (Not that I have that ability, either. It's just an observation.)
The Preparation doesn't contain much in the way of action, but you can tell that there will be plenty in the upcoming books. The author admits to making this first piece the back-story to the rest of the upcoming parts. Despite this, it's setting up a good enough story I think I'm in for the long haul. I see myself going all ten rounds. The message contained within is as plain as the writing style: keep an eye and ear open to what is happening, listen to that inner voice we all have, hope for the best but prep for the worst, and don't waste time... it's coming.
I have only read The Preparation so far. It is 257 pages (not including the bonus chapter (see the website for details of those gems)). The Preparation is the scene setup for the actions to come. It focuses on the political, economic, and social circumstances that exist in these United States and the author's neighborhoods. These circumstances lead to a partial collapse of the government and society in general.
The author touts his story as different because in his story there is only a "partial" collapse and not a "total" collapse as most of the other novels in this genre portray. Like the Deep Winter series, this first book is a "how to" on prepping for disaster. Time is spent explaining how to obtain and store food, how to open the "prepping/survivalist" conversation with others, how to find a group of like minded individuals, where to find information you might need, as well as other topics on the subject. It's not bad, it's just that the real-life instructions are awkwardly placed. The author pauses his story to tuck in valuable information for the reader.
The Preparation is written in third person style, but is clearly otherwise in autobiographical style with a stop at the author's childhood memories, a brief stop during his 20's, then the extended stay at current events. The writing style is quite plain; the author doesn't have or didn't use the eloquence displayed by professional authors like King or Koonts. (Not that I have that ability, either. It's just an observation.)
The Preparation doesn't contain much in the way of action, but you can tell that there will be plenty in the upcoming books. The author admits to making this first piece the back-story to the rest of the upcoming parts. Despite this, it's setting up a good enough story I think I'm in for the long haul. I see myself going all ten rounds. The message contained within is as plain as the writing style: keep an eye and ear open to what is happening, listen to that inner voice we all have, hope for the best but prep for the worst, and don't waste time... it's coming.
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