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≫ Libro Free Unraveling The Immune Omnibus Book 1 eBook David Kazzie

Unraveling The Immune Omnibus Book 1 eBook David Kazzie



Download As PDF : Unraveling The Immune Omnibus Book 1 eBook David Kazzie

Download PDF  Unraveling The Immune Omnibus Book 1 eBook David Kazzie

PART I OF THE FOUR-PART IMMUNE SERIES.

THIS IS THE WAY THE WORLD ENDS.

Dr. Adam Fisher watches helplessly as the deadly Medusa virus sweeps the globe, wiping out humanity in a matter of weeks while he remains inexplicably immune. As Adam struggles to survive in a dying world beset by panic and lawlessness, he discovers a flicker of hope that will send him on a quest through a world unlike any he has ever known.

•#1 Bestseller - Post-Apocalyptic
•#1 Bestseller - Genetic Engineering
•#1 Bestseller - Dystopian

Check out the full IMMUNE series

•Book I The Immune, Full Omnibus Edition http//tinyurl.com/qel9xgx
•Book II The Living https//tinyurl.com/me3ztqf

Unraveling The Immune Omnibus Book 1 eBook David Kazzie

Some of the same dread found in Camus' The Plague permeates this narrative. The author takes us through the end of the world as we know it. The horror of a plague that kills so many the living cannot bury the dead is manifest. Blood is pooled in the ICU because there is nobody left to clean it up, and bodies are stacked in the corridors. It is like reading about the Black Death. The infrastructure of society collapses... and then the world starts to tilt into madness.

The novel is driven by the characters. They are believable and human - and their reactions to the devastation ring true. In grief and shock the most inane things go through a person's head, and little things trigger big emotions. I also appreciated the authenticity of the descriptions of life as an M.D.

I think the author did a great job with the description of places. It is a bit difficult for me to comment on this objectively however. Weirdly enough, I have been to (in some cases lived or worked in) every single place described in the book with the exception of the specific beach town - though I have been to the coast of the Carolinas for a couple of summers. In that respect it was a bit eerie for me, and my reading of it was overlaid with idiosyncratic feelings and associations. Still, I think most people will find the sense of place to be well conveyed in the details given, and the descriptions evocative without being excessive.

Bottom line: this is a really good book and an excellent treatment of the end of the world by virus. It is driven by the characters rather than "action" but it is riveting. I want this guy to write a zombie series! But that's just me.

Product details

  • File Size 1312 KB
  • Print Length 208 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publication Date January 6, 2015
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00RC3TH8E

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Unraveling The Immune Omnibus Book 1 eBook David Kazzie Reviews


It was actually a lot better than I thought. It has been a few months since I read the book so I don't remember the narration, but the story is actually really good. My only warning is if you aren't going to buy the second book don't read this one. I was disappointed in how this book ended, as there really was no ending at all, but I bought the second book, haven't read it yet as there are so many books out there to read, but it is definitely the next one (I hope).
Review UNRAVELING by DAVID KAZZIE

I am so glad I bought this entire series (its also available in omnibus format). It's a must-read for students of apocalyptic fiction writing, and for apocalyptic aficionados (waves three hands in air). If your particular apocalyptic preference is biological--plague, virus, biological weapons- you've got to read Mr. Kazzie' s IMMUNE SERIES. This author rocks. I couldn't stop reading! The viral apocalypse is vivified in all its gory glory. I loved it!!!
While I generally avoid apocalyptic books and movies, the description of this book somehow piqued my interest enough to give it a try. I'm glad I did, because I found it a very good read. It's an interesting approach to trying to reduce pollution and overpopulation, to say the least, and Kazzie does a very good job of developing several different characters and following both those responsible for the apocalypse and several of the few survivors. It makes you think about what it would be like if suddenly 99% of the population were gone, so that there was no more gas, electricity, phone service, internet, ready water supply, etc. It was interesting enough that I now have purchased and read the second book of the trilogy, and am looking forward to the third.
This book is flawless. Any apocalyptic fiction fans are going to love it. It has one of the best first lines I've read in recent times - "Miles Chadwick sat in a corner booth of Keens Steakhouse on West 36th street in Manhattan, waiting for the apocalypse to begin." Perhaps my only regret about the book is that after chapter one, we do not see Miles Chadwick again, though I've a feeling he will reappear in subsequent installments.

The writing is masterful, the pace fast, the plot utterly engaging, the characters intriguing. A must for fans of the genre, or anyone with a pulse.
I really wanted to give this book a higher rating and would have if certain things wouldn't have grated on my nerves like fingernails on a chalkboard. Kazzie has a good grasp of descriptive writing, though there's almost too much so that it draws away from what's actually going on. That I can overlook as it was consistent and didn't just pop up here and there. What really bothered me was how it seemed like he couldn't keep the names straight when he was describing what was happening to them. There were several scenes with the football player's kids and wife where it seemed like the kids' names were used interchangeably and that really bugged me. The other thing was the timeline; In at least one place the date skipped forward to the end of the month when the story was taking place much earlier in the month. It could have been a simple issue of a 2 instead of a 1, but that's something that's important to story flow and so it should have been caught. Same with the names.

Finally, it would have been nice to have a date for each chapter so that we know how much time has passed. It seemed like it was only a day or two until we're told it's been a week or more.

Beyond that, I think the story was good. I'm not sure that something with as short an incubation period as Medusa and it's lethality would spread as far and wide, and as fast, as it did. References were made to why Ebola didn't spread across Africa and I think that sort of undercut Medusa's believeability because it acted faster and far more lethally and yet was world wide within days.
Some of the same dread found in Camus' The Plague permeates this narrative. The author takes us through the end of the world as we know it. The horror of a plague that kills so many the living cannot bury the dead is manifest. Blood is pooled in the ICU because there is nobody left to clean it up, and bodies are stacked in the corridors. It is like reading about the Black Death. The infrastructure of society collapses... and then the world starts to tilt into madness.

The novel is driven by the characters. They are believable and human - and their reactions to the devastation ring true. In grief and shock the most inane things go through a person's head, and little things trigger big emotions. I also appreciated the authenticity of the descriptions of life as an M.D.

I think the author did a great job with the description of places. It is a bit difficult for me to comment on this objectively however. Weirdly enough, I have been to (in some cases lived or worked in) every single place described in the book with the exception of the specific beach town - though I have been to the coast of the Carolinas for a couple of summers. In that respect it was a bit eerie for me, and my reading of it was overlaid with idiosyncratic feelings and associations. Still, I think most people will find the sense of place to be well conveyed in the details given, and the descriptions evocative without being excessive.

Bottom line this is a really good book and an excellent treatment of the end of the world by virus. It is driven by the characters rather than "action" but it is riveting. I want this guy to write a zombie series! But that's just me.
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