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Tilo

Zombies Books in order: 1. We're Alive 2. Day By Day Armageddon 3. Roads Less Traveled Series 4. Alaskan Undead Apocalypse 5. World War Z 6. The Walking Dead 7. Rise Again 8. As the World Dies 9. Zombie Fallout

Member Since 2011

50
HELPFUL VOTES
  • 32 reviews
  • 33 ratings
  • 67 titles in library
  • 17 purchased in 2013
FOLLOWING
3
FOLLOWERS
23

  • 'Til Death Do Us Part: Zombie Fallout, Book 6

    • UNABRIDGED (14 hrs and 51 mins)
    • By Mark Tufo
    • Narrated By Sean Runnette
    • Whispersync for Voice-ready
    Overall
    (440)
    Performance
    (412)
    Story
    (417)

    BT, Gary, and Mrs. Deneaux race to the Talbot compound in a desperate bid to turn the tides of a lost war. Is Michael dead? This is the question plaguing the Talbots as they prepare for the final showdown with a merciless enemy hell-bent on their absolute destruction.

    Teddy says: "Series Back on Track"
    "I still don't think its funny"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    By now you're well acquainted with the type of humor in these books. I don't mind it, but it should be just once in a while. I even fast forwarded parts of the trip with John because the entirety of it is a side quest with side characters and it just wasn't important to the story and since I'm not a dope head couldn't relate to whatever is so funny about drugs.

    Mrs Deneaux become my hero, finally someone who took the apocalypse seriously and kicked ass despite being a fragile old lady. But if she is so keen on self preservation its remarkable that she is so blatant about her motives when she knows she is reliant on the people shes with to survive.

    There are several odd inexplicable things and plot holes in this story. Such as it starts off with divine intervention which left me wondering if there was any point to fear dying anymore. Also what was the point about the knife and the rune stones, not to mention the sudden appearance of the Shaman from nowhere? The end of the book just kinda wrapped up in a rushed fashion without tying together previous elements which were alluded to. The story built up and has so many elements but everything is just irrelevant to the end.

    The epilogue is probably the most powerful part of the entire book and worth reading to the end. If only more of the book was like this.

    Good book and series, but not ravingly good and not enough about zombies but rather vampires and other things.

    1 of 2 people found this review helpful
  • Beyond the Dark: The Dark Trilogy, Book 3

    • UNABRIDGED (6 hrs and 22 mins)
    • By Patrick D'Orazio
    • Narrated By Jim Cooper
    Overall
    (5)
    Performance
    (5)
    Story
    (5)

    It has been six weeks since the virus engulfed the world. Everyone who was infected died, and then rose again. Governments collapsed, armies fell, and civilizations turned to dust as the human race tore itself to pieces. The living are in danger of becoming extinct.… Jeff Blaine has witnessed the annihilation of his family and everything that mattered to him. When he steps outside his home for the first time since the world died, he meets Megan, George, and Jason, three other survivors who force him to accept that there may still be a reason to fight and live to see another day.

    Tilo says: "Much Better"
    "Much Better"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    This was much better than the previous book, with a faster pace more action and just a better story. No where near as good as the first book though.

    The RV they tried to get away in crashes and everybody separates for various reasons and horrible things happen as they try to survive the marauding zombies in the city. I'm not too keen in children in stories because they usually are just a burden and don't help out, and this story is no different. Of course they whimper and cry, attracting the hoard. Didn't mind how things turned out though.

    The epilogue with George was just great, think I liked that part more than anything.

    A satisfying conclusion, but I will miss Megan and Jeff and wish the author would continue with their story. Preferably minus the children unless they have helpful roles like Jason had in the first book.

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  • Into the Dark: Book Two of the Dark Trilogy

    • UNABRIDGED (6 hrs and 4 mins)
    • By Patrick D'Orazio
    • Narrated By Jim Cooper
    Overall
    (12)
    Performance
    (11)
    Story
    (11)

    Six weeks ago, the mysterious virus came out of nowhere and engulfed the world. Everyone infected seemed to die...then rise again. Jeff Blaine did his best to hold his family together and to protect them from the horrors scratching at their door, but in the end, they were ripped away from him like everything else that ever mattered. Lost and alone, Jeff decided his only option was to destroy as many of the monsters that stole his life away before they destroy him as well.

    Mike Naka says: "tension filled inter-group conflict among zombies"
    "Stupidity Level: High"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    I get frustrated when I have to listen to people doing stupid things in books and this is such a sharp contrast against the first book when there were just a handful of people behaving as sensibly as they can to survive.

    The book picks up right off from the first book as if it was just one book, which it probably should be. At the end of book one I really thought they were in trouble and thought of all the bad things that was going to happen to them and Megan. As it turns out the group they meet isn't blood thirsty after all but led by a man who considers himself a benevolent dictator and won't let them go but forces them to survive together. So the entire book is basically about how our group try to delicately negotiate the terms of their stay the best they can within this new group.

    Not bad, little cliche but the author made it rather interesting. Now the stupid bits. I don't want to listen about a 12 yr old boy sulking and his "issues". His "talking to" just went on and on and on and I just wish he went along on a scavenging run and get eaten. His childish issue just was a huge part of this book, far too big a part. Unless its a children's book, kids should be kept in the background because they are just annoying.

    Then there are the two teenagers who I call Beavis and Butthead who screw around and bring ruin on the entire camp. Someone gets bit and rather than facing the reality of the situation our formerly clever Jeff wants to lug him around and after hoping he has some clever plan it turns out he doesn't and intends to die protecting someone infected.

    Very difficult to listen through all the stupid things that happen and then, like the first book, abruptly ends almost mid sentence. Had pre ordered the third book already, so I'll give it a try and hope things will improve.

    0 of 2 people found this review helpful
  • Comes the Dark: Book One of the Dark Trilogy

    • UNABRIDGED (6 hrs and 34 mins)
    • By Patrick D' Orazio
    • Narrated By Jim Cooper
    Overall
    (25)
    Performance
    (23)
    Story
    (23)

    First time novelist, Patrick D'Orazio, takes us on a journey that follows the path of the everyman, Jeff Blaine, in the days after the end of the world. Six weeks have passed since the virus ravaged the world's population and in that time most of humanity has passed into shadow, turning into corrupt, rotting flesh eaters that known only pain and hunger as they attempt to destroy the remaining members of the human race. Jeff has lost everything, including much of his desire to continue surviving in this hell on earth.

    Amanda says: "GREAT BOOK!"
    "Its a keeper!"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    The story doesn't try to come up with any new angle or "twist", rather focusing on the simple issue of your average man, Jeff, trying to survive the apocalypse. He meets up with Megan and the dynamic between them is entertaining to read as it swings from affection to maniacal anger because of the insane situation they find themselves in.

    Jeff is clever and I am not left thinking something is unrealistic, stupid or lame. Well, ok, maybe they shouldn't have split up those couple of times, but maybe these things are just mandatory in zombie books.

    The pace may seem rather plodding as I think it takes place only over 3 days, but there is plenty happening during that time. You're even left wondering if the story will ever progress as they can't even seem to get outside of their neighbourhood.

    There isn't much of a plot and few characters. They just try different things, drive one way or the other and that's the story. This is just fine because the content is just great.

    Narration was good, although the gruffness in Jeffs voice seemed to change sometimes.

    Never read a book with a bigger cliff hangar than this one. So yeah, this story is expensive being so short but I'm a downloading the other two books now so I figure its worth it.

    2 of 3 people found this review helpful
  • Among the Dead: Among the Living, Book 2

    • UNABRIDGED (9 hrs and 20 mins)
    • By Timothy W. Long
    • Narrated By David DeVries
    Overall
    (31)
    Performance
    (29)
    Story
    (30)

    Seattle is under siege by masses of living dead, and the military struggles to prevent the virus from spreading outside the city. Kate is tired of sitting around. When she learns that a rescue mission is heading back into the chaos, she jumps at the chance to tag along and put her unique skill set and, more importantly, swords to use.Lester finds a new way to deal with the situation: ignore reality with drugs. When he manages to find himself threatened, he joins with an unlikely ally to take the fight to the dead.

    Mike Naka says: "ok follow-up"
    "Neah, don't think I'll read the next one"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    At the end of the first book the characters finally met up in the finale as they scrambled to the stadium. Wow, great, I better go get book two because now the real story is going to start with a group of survivors like regular zombie books. But no. Can't say that this book is a cliche. It again starts off real slow, and soon they all split up and the book becomes a jumble of non related series of short stories. At least no more (non essential) sex scenes this time.

    Great that this book tries to be different, but its really hard to beat a winning formula.

    Kate is the only cool character which you want to root for, but her schizophrenic personality leaves you disappointed because she isn't what you wanted her to be. In my previous review of the first book, I wrote that she was a bit like Dexter, but that was just from a few paragraphs in the beginning. Dexter has no feelings and takes no pleasure. Kate has a lot of emotions and more. She seems to be a mesh mash of nasty craziness. I don't know what real world psychiatric profile this author is trying to copy, but I am starting to think that he is making it up. I can understand her taking revenge on men, but mindless zombies are entirely different.

    I thought this book had a star with Kate, but nope, every time she is a heroine, Timothy Long has to kill the mood and turn her into a monster. Ever see a painting where you thought you could appreciate the artistic value in it, but it's still damn ugly and you'd never hang that in your house? That's how the author paints Kate, and this book.

    Good piece of writing in its individual isolated parts, but the over all story is crud.

    I'll check out reviews of the next book, but don't think I'll invest further in the development of this story. Certainly not after the epilogue at the end of this one.

    0 of 2 people found this review helpful
  • Among the Living

    • UNABRIDGED (10 hrs and 2 mins)
    • By Timothy W. Long
    • Narrated By David DeVries
    • Whispersync for Voice-ready
    Overall
    (88)
    Performance
    (81)
    Story
    (83)

    The dead walk. Now the real battle for Seattle has begun. When a gas leak causes the National Guard to forcibly evacuate the neighborhood, Lester isn't going anywhere. The former dope pusher has a new clientele… the kind that require him to deal lead instead of drugs.

    Mike Naka says: "lifeless in seattle - a solid zombie story"
    "Both lousy and really good"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    The first half of this book was lousy, I'd give it a two. Then the second part, awesome, that's a four or even a five. Therefore the three stars for average.

    First the first part; roughly half the length of the story is character introduction and background information. Hardly any zombies at all, but a ton of sex. Yeah, I was looking for zombies and I got sex. Without illustrations I'm not interested. Then there is the serial killer who reminded me of Dexter, but liked a lot of sex. So people who think zombie stories don't have enough character and interpersonal relationship depth in them, here you go, half the story is that. I just kept zoning out and had to rewind missed parts or fast forward to speed it up. Just wasn't interested in that much content on background information.

    Action really picked up in the second half and if the story just blended these two parts together smoothly I think it would have worked out better, although it still didn't need that much vivid sex in it.

    Gotta say it worked though because I did get attached to the characters and this being a zombie tale I'm not giving anything away when I say somebodies gotta die. So yeah, I don't appreciate having to through all that listening in the first half to have them die on me! So it upset me, didn't like it.

    Narrator was pretty good, did excellent female voices but the style did feel a bit like a 1930's private detective novel. Kinda weird.

    Gonna download the second book now, so yeah, this series is promising.

    1 of 2 people found this review helpful
  • As The World Dies: Untold Tales, Vol. 1

    • UNABRIDGED (5 hrs)
    • By Rhiannon Frater
    • Narrated By Kathy Bell Denton
    Overall
    (22)
    Performance
    (19)
    Story
    (20)

    THE FIRST DAYS: AS THE WORLD DIES introduced Jenni and Katie and their harrowing journey to the makeshift fort in the Texas Hill Country. But theirs is not the only tale to be told. In the first volume of the AS THE WORLD DIES UNTOLD TALES experience three terrifying tales of those who are forced to face the unrelenting and hungry walking dead.

    Tilo says: "After 2 seconds I tried to return it"
    "After 2 seconds I tried to return it"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    I downloaded this after reading the really good first book in her series "As the world dies" on the recommendation of a review there. But I immediately heard that the recording was of less quality than those books. I am not sure if it was just my download, but there was background static noise when she spoke and some repeats in some parts. In the second story it seemed like the narrator was speed reading. 2 seconds into the first story I thought, what a big mistake, its going to be full of the romance nonsense that I didn't like from the main series.

    So I shelved this book and continued with the series until I finished it. But it does give some background info on some of the secondary characters so you may want to read this before book 2 of the series since many new characters are introduced there and it fits the time line.

    The last story, Erics is what made this book really good, and its by far the main story of this book, the others were insignificant in the time spent and I don't even remember the second one. Eric is stuck with his dog in a bed and breakfast, and his girlfriend took his car and abandoned him (good riddance!). Much of the story is how he confronts the outbreak alone and isolated until all hell breaks loose and he, his dog and a girl try to make it to the fort from the main series. It has a funny part when he decides he has to save his own life and run away, leaving her behind, but he's so out of shape she catches up and runs past him!

    The cover illustration is how they get stuck for weeks in a water tower with little food and almost no ammunition and then suddenly its revealed that he's carrying a "small" machete. *Facepalm*. Rhiannon Frater again reveals that her stories lack male aggression. I could have slashed all those zombie heads off while hanging from the ladder with a "small" machete. I wonder if she knows what a machete is.

    So if you want to know how Lydia died, you need to get this. Hint: its NOM NOM NOM. If you're like me and don't care about lesbian love, you can get it for Erics story, its pretty good.

    0 of 0 people found this review helpful
  • Siege: As the World Dies, Book 3

    • UNABRIDGED (12 hrs and 47 mins)
    • By Rhiannon Frater
    • Narrated By Cassandra Campbell
    Overall
    (137)
    Performance
    (121)
    Story
    (123)

    The zombie illness has shattered civilization. The survivors, who have found tenuous safety in Texas, defend their fort against the walking dead and living bandits. The people of Ashley Oaks are stunned to discover that the vice president of the United States is alive and commanding the remnants of the US military. And what’s left of the US government has plans for this group of determined survivors.

    cora says: "First book I cried over - Great end to trilogy"
    "Too bad it didn't get better"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    By the third book my opinion is probably outnumbered here, but the series was good enough for me to want to follow it trough. The series ends up being an average rated zombie tale with the twist being the strong female/alternative sexuality angle but it actually gets worse because now I have to listen about a gay male swooning over other males too. Luckily for me it just skimmed the surface and had a funny gay humor theme about it. I very much like the compound setting of the series, but it was way too comfy in this story and I hope another author picks this theme up. Or Rhiannon continues this story, but only after taking to heart my reviews :).

    I didn't find the plot particularly convincing, rather cliché actually, the evil US govt wants to come in and ruin things. But it was actually just some stupid power hungry senator who had to be put in her place by Katie while Travis the man with no gonads follows like a whipped dog.

    Rather than coming up with some clever plan (Like playing along until everyone moved to the fort the first, what they gonna do outnumbered?), they just go and tell the senator exactly what they want to do.

    So every thing is supposed to be resolved because Katie talked tough but of course they haven't learned their lesson in leaving disgruntled people the freedom to ruin everything. Disaster strikes and someone important dies, which was actually rather sad and upsetting. Dying should be left to the "red-shirts". I found the zombie horde and ending rather anti-climatic too. Not to mention the silly ghosts everywhere. Yeah, ghosts.

    I just found most of the story a load of phooey and in need of some aggressive resolution and problem solving, whether it be from a male or a female character, preferably both! Too bad Nerit didn't feature more in the story.

    If a 4th book comes out, I'd probably by it, muttering to myself about all the changes I would make in it.

    1 of 2 people found this review helpful
  • Fighting to Survive: As the World Dies, Book 2

    • UNABRIDGED (12 hrs and 55 mins)
    • By Rhiannon Frater
    • Narrated By Cassandra Campbell
    Overall
    (199)
    Performance
    (178)
    Story
    (176)

    Picking up where The First Days ends, Fighting to Survive features the further zombie-killing, civilization-saving adventures of a pair of sexy, kick butt heroines and the men who love them. A hundred or so survivors of the zombie plague have found tenuous safety in the walled off center of a small Texas town. Now the hard work of survival begins - finding enough food; creating safe, weather-resistant shelter; establishing laws; and fighting off both the undead who want to eat them and the living bandits who want to rob and kill them.

    Vanessa says: "OK OK she LIKES both SEXES..MOVE ON ALREADY! JEEZ!"
    "First book was better"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    Katie and Jenni settle into the compound in this book and the story revolves around it, how they retake the hotel and expand the "fort". Because they don't move around life is kind of comfortable. Unlike other books where survivalist compounds are often just a passing chapter, this book centers around it. The book is about how they rebuild, fight off bandits and the social and political life of the fort.

    They don't have any problems with electricity, water, food or flushing toilets. I think the people on board the Carnival cruise ship Triumph had it tougher, apart from people dying, in rather stupid ways I think in this book. Everybody split up and do search and destroy missions in the hotel, which leads to needless deaths. Otherwise the action is pretty good, that Israeli Nerit is great. But then it dips into lovey dovey stuff.

    The story spends seemingly even more time on girlie stuff than in the first book. Romance and ball room dancing and dresses. Its not easy to listen to these parts as they drag on. Shane comes along and ruins the partying though and now the author shows that she just doesn't understand male culture. If the author understood this she would know that Shane would not be allowed to talk the way he does and create all the problems that he does. Like the hierarchy in a pack of dogs, things would have already been settled in the first book. But the supporting male character, Travis, has no gonads and so it drags on the way it does. The author just doesn't know what to do with male characters aside from being pretty bimbos on the arms of the leading women.

    This book is actually a pretty good 9 hr long zombie book, but then these annoying parts were tacked on and it became 12 hrs long. So at least I got my credits worth of zombie telling and forgot about those parts as soon as I got through them. I went on ahead and bought the third book in the series; Siege.

    I'm starting to like the narrator more and more though, I think shes great.

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  • The First Days: As the World Dies, Book 1

    • UNABRIDGED (11 hrs and 49 mins)
    • By Rhiannon Frater
    • Narrated By Cassandra Campbell
    • Whispersync for Voice-ready
    Overall
    (311)
    Performance
    (279)
    Story
    (277)

    The morning that the world ends, Katie is getting ready for court and housewife Jenni is taking care of her family. Less than two hours later, they are fleeing for their lives from a zombie horde. Thrown together by circumstance, Jenni and Katie become a powerful zombie-killing partnership, mowing down zombies as they rescue Jenni's stepson, Jason, from an infected campground.

    Garth says: "Not for my demographic"
    "The romancing didn't over shadow the story"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    Yes, its a bit of awkward feeling for a dude to listen to two girls swooning over a guy, but never mind, it was a bit refreshing to see things from a girls perspective and there is still a good story going on which isn't over shadowed. Still plenty of action with guns and gore. Perhaps tone it a tad down for the likely majority male listeners and give them a bone too to chew on too.

    The story is about two women surviving the initial outbreak and how they eventually find their way to a survivors compound there they start retaking the city...well, at the end anyways. By far the most powerful part of the book, or perhaps any zombie book I've listened to, is the opening scene which you hear in the audio sample. That was creepy and scary. You start identifying with Jenni right away and relieved that she quickly turns out to be a helluva tough cookie despite what she went through.

    I think the narrator did a great job. I don't know much about Israeli accents but it was believable to me.

    The writing quality is great, makes me respond emotionally, happy parts and sad parts of the book did what they were supposed to do. Ending was kinda "meh" though.

    Going to buy the second installment now.

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  • The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can't Stand Positive Thinking

    • UNABRIDGED (6 hrs and 17 mins)
    • By Oliver Burkeman
    • Narrated By Oliver Burkeman
    • Whispersync for Voice-ready
    Overall
    (102)
    Performance
    (92)
    Story
    (92)

    The Antidote is a series of journeys among people who share a single, surprising way of thinking about life. What they have in common is a hunch about human psychology: that it’s our constant effort to eliminate the negative that causes us to feel so anxious, insecure, and unhappy. And that there is an alternative "negative path" to happiness and success that involves embracing the things we spend our lives trying to avoid.

    Dr. Amen-Ra says: "THE ANTIDOTE...TO APATHY, ANGST, INERTIA, ETC."
    "Doesn't make me feel better"
    Overall
    Performance
    Story

    Wow, I really thought that this book would be for me. And it is in a way, but he's talking to the already converted. I think most of us aren't cheery happy go lucky people 100% of the time.

    This book spends a good amount of time debunking "feel good" motivating books and makes fun about how nonsensical they are. It has a bunch of facts and "logic" on its side but is too dry and intellectual.

    I just didn't find it helpful. A half wit already knows this stuff. I'm already a cynic and critical of books like "The Secret", but at least it made me feel better when I resigned myself to being brain washed by it.

    Yes, we supposed to use reason to solve our problems, we have to face reality and wishful thinking doesn't really solve any real problems and actually things can get worse if you ignore bad things creeping up on you.

    Shrug, I'm still depressed. I need something to motivate me. This wasn't it.

    Oh, and he talks with a lisp, or close to. Its not too bad, but he should have gotten a professional reader.

    0 of 1 people found this review helpful

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