Ashton Memorial The Memorial Trilogy Book 2 eBook Robert R Best
Download As PDF : Ashton Memorial The Memorial Trilogy Book 2 eBook Robert R Best
How long does it take the world to fall apart when the dead inexplicably rise from their graves to eat the living? As they travel to the big city of Ashton to find their families, Angela Land and Parker Welch discover the world goes to hell fast. Angie, desperate to find a safe place for her and her two children, will fight any man or animal - living or dead - that gets in her way. Meanwhile, Park hasn't seen his twin daughters for years, but he'll need to hurry if he's going to rescue them from their crazed power-hungry stepfather and the chaos that is his new kingdom, Ashton Memorial Zoo.
With more undead, bat-swinging, blood-soaked action, Ashton Memorial asks the question... what would you do to survive?
Ashton Memorial The Memorial Trilogy Book 2 eBook Robert R Best
Ok......I am a big zombie fan and have read numerous offerings by different authors, so this is not my favorite trilogy. Granted, I am only on the second book, but I do have a few comments. The son, Dalton, is said to be about 12 years old, but he acts like a 6 year old. He is always clinging and screaming; his mother has caught him at least two times when he has jumped from above her.......ergo, he is the size of Tom Thumb and the tiniest 12 year old in history or she is a lot bigger and stronger than the man she is traveling with. Her daughter is the most believable character in the book, and Park(er) is a very passive character for a man.I also found it intensely annoying that the characters regularly "smirked" at each other! This makes it sound like a bunch of teens hanging at the mall on Saturday night with nothing to do! Certainly not a group of people threatened by the end of the world!
However, the most aggravating thing about reading this book was the consistent use of, "Oh, my god!", as if the author were referring to a lesser god (i.e., Roman, Greek, Egyptian, etc.) The proper way to write this is "Oh, my God!", with a capital G!
It is almost comedic how many times the phrase is used; sort of like the old Monty Python number with "spam, spam, spam!"
Finally, if you really want to read a good couple of books on the same subject, try reading Apocalypse Z: The Beginning of the End and Dark Days (Apocalypse Z) by Manel Loureiro (definitely a thinking persons zombie novel!)
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Ashton Memorial The Memorial Trilogy Book 2 eBook Robert R Best Reviews
If you love zombie fiction, as I do, this is a must read for you. It grabs you and hangs on, just as # 1 in the series did. Well written and worth the read. You won't be sorry..
Exciting sequel to the first book. I enjoyed it especially at the Zoo where the animals had gone amok. At times it feels like I'm dragging but other times there are quite few surprises that I didn't totally expect. Love Maylee and her bat! Truly!
This is a sweet and very fun little evil book. It picks right up were book one left off and has a wonder full end that has you waiting baitedly for book 3!
I finished Ashton Memorial last week and needed a couple days to organize my thoughts on the book. Lakewood Memorial was very emotional and visceral. Often a sequel doesn't live up to the original. Ashton Memorial managed to top Lakewood Memorial (LM). Where LM left the reader breathless, Ashton Memorial was a slug in the gut after chasing you down the block at top speed. It was a thrill ride from page one through to the ending. The characters a re well developed and feel like old friends ina really tough situation.It picks up at the ending of LM and does for zoos what Jaws did for beaches. Thanks, Robb. Add one more thing to my list of creepy places to be careful when visiting.
Bottom line, get this book. Buy it on or paperback; just get a copy. You can't have mine, so get your own. If you haven't read Lakewood Memorial, the story will still make sense, but the two really feed nicely into each other.
I enjoyed the first book in this series and had high hopes for this book. It is well written and, to me more importantly, a fresh idea for the zombie theme.
I finished Lakewood Memorial with a hesitant reach for Ashton Memorial. I pushed past my opinions of the first book and opened to the first page. Right away it read more intense than LM. It starts off right where the first one ended, it set up all the characters and placed them into their roles as the book went further. If anything Ashton Memorial outshines LM by far, then you are left on pins waiting for the third book to be released. It is recommend to those who love to read about zombies and have a storyline be told in front of their eyes. Cannot wait for 'World Memorial'
Robert R. Best, <strong>Ashton Memorial</strong> (CreateSpace, 2010)
After finishing up <em>Lakewood Memorial</em>, the first of Best's projected Memorial trilogy (the third should be released later this year), I wasn't thrilled, but I was intrigued enough to check out the second volume in the trilogy given that while Best wasn't really doing anything new with the material, he could at least write it well enough to keep me interested and minimize the damage from some of the shortcomings. Now I've finished <em>Ashton Memorial</em>, book two, and what I most feared occurred those shortcomings roared into life, taking center stage and crushing the momentum, and very nearly the life, out of the series.
The first of these shortcomings, which was more restrained in book one than the second, has been mentioned in any number of reviews, so I'll just touch on it here Best's use of profanity has gotten way, way out of control. While it wasn't at a level in <em>Lakewood Memorial</em> that showed the kind of thoughtful precision I would have liked (a great example of what I mean by that is Joseph Finder's wonderful novel <em>Paranoia</em>), he at least kept it to a dull roar. Not so here, and other reviewers have already posted the most unintentionally amusing examples.
The second is a bit more distressing, and yet it hasn't been addressed by anyone. Best is attempting to make the personalities of his characters age-appropriate, and to an extent that is to be commended. But Best's younger characters tend to sound and act much, much younger than they are; Dalton's age is given a few times as twelve, but without that, I'd have pegged him at seven or eight. Same with the supposedly sixteen-year-old Ella; even now that I've finished the book and know there are no references to it within, I wonder whether Best meant her to be mentally challenged, because there's no way a sixteen-year-old, however immature, would do and say some of the things Ella does.
Those two criticisms can basically be tacked onto my review of the first book and the conglomerate could stand verbatim; other than a change of scenery and an Evil Overlord(TM), there's really not much difference between <em>Lakewood Memorial</em> and <em>Ashton Memorial</em>. Those two criticisms, however, are enough to drag the rating down an entire star. Will have to think for a while about whether I want to pursue this trilogy to its conclusion. **
Ok......I am a big zombie fan and have read numerous offerings by different authors, so this is not my favorite trilogy. Granted, I am only on the second book, but I do have a few comments. The son, Dalton, is said to be about 12 years old, but he acts like a 6 year old. He is always clinging and screaming; his mother has caught him at least two times when he has jumped from above her.......ergo, he is the size of Tom Thumb and the tiniest 12 year old in history or she is a lot bigger and stronger than the man she is traveling with. Her daughter is the most believable character in the book, and Park(er) is a very passive character for a man.
I also found it intensely annoying that the characters regularly "smirked" at each other! This makes it sound like a bunch of teens hanging at the mall on Saturday night with nothing to do! Certainly not a group of people threatened by the end of the world!
However, the most aggravating thing about reading this book was the consistent use of, "Oh, my god!", as if the author were referring to a lesser god (i.e., Roman, Greek, Egyptian, etc.) The proper way to write this is "Oh, my God!", with a capital G!
It is almost comedic how many times the phrase is used; sort of like the old Monty Python number with "spam, spam, spam!"
Finally, if you really want to read a good couple of books on the same subject, try reading Apocalypse Z The Beginning of the End and Dark Days (Apocalypse Z) by Manel Loureiro (definitely a thinking persons zombie novel!)
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