• Shattered Hourglass

  • Day by Day Armageddon, Book 3
  • By: J. L. Bourne
  • Narrated by: Jay Snyder
  • Length: 9 hrs and 27 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (2,407 ratings)

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Shattered Hourglass  By  cover art

Shattered Hourglass

By: J. L. Bourne
Narrated by: Jay Snyder
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Publisher's summary

In a desperate bid to take back the continental United States - where hordes of undead now dominate the ravaged human population - a Navy commander leads a global mission to the heart of the pandemic. Task Force Hourglass is humanity’s final hope, and his team’s agonizing decisions could mean living one day more - or surrendering to the eternal hell that exists between life and death.

Shattered Hourglasss is the terrifying new novel in the acclaimed zombie apocalypse series.

©2012 J.L. Bourne (P)2012 Audible, Inc.

Featured Article: Mmmm, Brains...Satisfy Your Cravings with the 20 Best Zombie Audiobooks Ever


Zombies have been a potent cultural force for decades. Something about the concept of a ragtag crew of survivors facing off against endless masses of shuffling brain-munchers really seems to speak to people! There are hundreds, if not thousands, of zombie-themed stories out there. But which ones are the very best? And which zombie audiobooks will have you double-checking the locks and sleeping with a baseball bat next to your bed?

What listeners say about Shattered Hourglass

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

sadly disappointed! where did you go J.L.?

Any additional comments?

WARNING: SOME SPOILERS

first, let me preface my review by saying dbda (day by day armageddon) and beyond exile are some of my favorite zombie books. i was extremely psyched about shattered hourglass coming out on 12/26. it was like a belated christmas gift.

with that said, i was extremely disappointed by the time i finished listening to shattered hourglass. i loved the first two books, and that's why i'm soo harsh on shattered hourglass.

many of the negative reviews of dbda cited the one-dimensional characters and the journal style story. me...neither bothered me.

so, i was kind of surprised the journal style storytelling was totally abandoned. really, it's not a bad departure. it would've been really boring to listen to kill roy record his daily thoughts while submerged in a sub sailing to china.

instead, j.l. tells almost all of the story in 3rd person. i don't mind that at all since the hotel 23 group is split up at the end of beyond exile, and it would've been impossible to capture what happened to them via kill roy's journal.

shattered hourglass tells the stories of 6 different groups of people. 3 we already know of, and 3 we're introduced to.

uss george washington: the old hotel 23 crowd
john (kill roy's neighbor), tara (kill roy's girlfriend he rescued from the car), granny deane and danny, and will, jan, and laura. while it's nice to follow their stories, what happens to them is totally predictable.

uss virginia sub: kill roy and sane
thankfully, j.l. uses time skips of a couple of days to help time move along on the sub. i was shocked that kill roy and sane didn't talk much until the very end of the story, like the last hour!

uss virginia sub: seal team
at the end of beyond exile, kill roy is coerced to join a team to venture to china to recover chang. suprisingly, only 4 seals are assembled for the mission: rico, rex, huck, and griff. throughout the 1st part of the story, they are hardly mentioned until the first part of the mission- they have to gain access to an underground military facility on the hawaiian island oahu. while the action is reminiscent of the first 2 books, i was kind of disappointed kill roy didn't join them. i can understand that since he was recruited as a consultant. instead, he plays a minor part as their eyes via a remote controlled drone.

arctic outpost 4: crusoe, mark, brett, and kung
outpost 4 is one of the many covert artic research bases that was set up to drill ice cores to investigate what happened 20,000 years ago. in my humble opinion, this could've been an interesting short story on its own. j.l. starts to build their story- their plight to survive in negative 50 degrees as the dead come back to life and their fuel supplies running low. there was a lot of potential here, but everything j.l. was building gets abandoned to the very end.

hotel 23: task force phoenix
hotel 23 gets some new inhabitants: doc, billy, hoss, and disco. tf phoenix's goal is to investigate the drops by remote 6 and find out more about them. like the arctic outpost story, this culd've been a great short story in itself. the character's flashbacks of how they survived and became part of tf phoenix were great and even deserve their own book. once again, there's so much potential that it's disappointing that their story just abruptly ends.

remote 6
we finally get a glimpse behind the curtain. sadly, there is no great wizard of oz, but a megalomaniac who is known as "god." this is my biggest disappointment! there was soo much potential wasted. remote 6 were like the ultimate bad guys- they were secretive, powerful, mysterious, and feared. instead, their leader turns out to be a caricature of a bad comic book super villain.

chang
at the end of beyond exile we learn that a crashed alien craft is the reason for the outbreak. ok i guess. it was kind of a buzz kill, but it didn't affect my decision to download shattered hourglass the moment it was available. as i watched the time left dwindle, i kept thinking, "they haven't even reached china yet! maybe we're going to get another cliffhanger!" i was thinking damn...china's gonna be difficult. a billion zombies with maybe 3/10 being those special zombies. instead, the whole story ends in the remaining 50 minutes!

overall, i enjoyed going back to the story and world i fell in love with. however by the end, i felt spurned b/c the ending of each story was rushed. so much potential was left on the table! it's frustrating!

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38 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

A bit on the dull side

Bourne is responsible for my Zombie obsession. The first and second book of the series is awesome. Shattered Glass veers off course into choas leaving me unable to focus on the situations, scenarios, and characters. Say goodbye to the journal format of the last two books and hello to multiple character situations, which tugs on my ADD. LOL! The fascination with the main character's struggle has ended with the elimination of the journal format making the listen not enjoyable, hard to follow, and weak!

The positive side is the closer to several elements of the story and characters.

The book WAS worth the credit!

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31 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    2 out of 5 stars

Who Wrote this book?

Would you try another book from J. L. Bourne and/or Jay Snyder?

Wow, I listened to this book for about the first four hours and then began to realize that this is not what I expected. This is what we waited 2 years for? I can't believe at all this is the same Author who wrote the 1st two books which are among one of my favorites in Zombie culture titles. I loved the series and told all my friends how this one series was an all night scary listen! But this book was not the same timeline format as the first two successful books.
This storyline jumps like a cat dancing on a hot plate as I was back and forth trying to figure out what and why did he bring in new characters and ignore the pre-established ones we loved and cared about. The name Kill as a character said it all as I groaned as bad as the zombie's moaning in the story. Why and how he made the main character act like a whinney B_tch is unforgivable to start and how predictable it played out was no surprise. I have to believe this was a paycheck to the writer as there was no effort put into this book.
How and why The Author changed the format was bad advice, maybe because he was on deployment most of these years, it may have distracted his focus. I would have gladly waited another year for a more suspenseful type story just like the first two books were written.
I know this is a harsh review but I really feel let down as a reader and fan of the series.

Any additional comments?

I would recomend people to just pass on this version and hope there is another creative author that could do a timeline Zombie tale.

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21 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Aw shucks

First impression is that what I had feared has happened, the journal style of the story was completely removed. The main character that has remained nameless through 2 books now has a name, Killjoy. The entire feeling of the series has changed and I am not sure if I like it or not. Yea okay I was totally disappointed with this book. However it was a solid story by itself, not compared to the rest of the story. If you are in need of a one off zombie story fix Shattered Hourglass: Day by Day Armageddon, Book 3 would be perfect for you. If you are looking to be engrossed in a somewhat vague journal entries of an unnamed military man trying to eek out his existence, I think you will be disappointed.

Listening to Jay Snyder is like being serenaded by an old friend that has a way will telling stories. It’s kind of funny because every time I listen to an Audible Frontiers book, Snyder often does the intro regardless of who the actual narrator is, I get giddy inside and think to myself “Did I misread who the narrator was?”, then the real narrator takes over and I breath a sigh of disappointment. Not today folks! Snyder has a a very dynamic range of voices, useful for whatever type of character might cross his lips, combined with his foresight to create tension and suspense by choosing great places for pauses, rhythm changes, and emotional outbursts. If you can’t I am a fan of Snyder’s work and will continue to look for his narrations.

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14 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

I can live with the change in style but...

I'm sure the change from the previous diary style will irritate some readers; personally I get why the author made the change. The main group of characters is necessarily split up and he would have had to jump through major hoops for a single narrator to effectively capture what was going on in all the locations. So from that perspective I think it was a bold move to make the change.

Unfortunately I'm not convinced the actual story held up to the switch in style. The writing is a little rough -- the author does struggle a little with the new voice -- but the first half or so of the book is pretty good, demonstrating several of the things that were so strong in the first two volumes. Bourne really does do zombie combat scenes extremely well and even three books in was pulling out scenarios and twists that kept it fresh.

But the latter part of the book felt really rushed to me. Almost as if he couldn't quite decide if it was going to take 4 books or if he had to wrap it in 3. Some of the plot elements introduced in book 2 are wrapped up in what I felt was very unsatisfying ways and at the end I was left thinking that Remote6 and Chang really felt like a let down. The ending could leave it open for a book 4 so we'll see if he does go that route and puts some more meat on the bones.

I'd still recommend the series and anyone who has read the first 2 volumes will want to know what happens but I do think this is the weakest of the volumes by far.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Horrible, hard to follow, too much military jargon

If you read the first two books and loved them like I did do yourself a favor and do NOT NOT NOT read this one. You will be disappointed beyond belief. I don't know what J.L. was thinking. The journal entry to 3rd person narrative I understand, don't like, but understand. The plot is weak, feels rushed and I swear I found myself restarting chapters over and over again. It was REALLY had to follow. Dry. It almost felt like a boring documentary that you watch at 3am on a Friday night. I am VERY disappointed. I was so excited to read book 3 and wish now I didn't.

Hopefully he'll get his act together and go back to what we readers love about his work. Military culture, jargon & info weaved into a great story and not "too" over our heads. J.L. Bourne are you reading this.................dude you dropped the ball on this one. Please if there's a book 4 read all of our reviews and take notes!!!!

If there's nothing else to read get it. If you're a fan don't waste your time you'll just get frustrated!!!

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9 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    2 out of 5 stars

J.L. ! Were you rushed to write and finish this?

Like other reviews of this book that I just finished reading,I didn't mind the style chsnge of the book. It is no longer a diary account type story. I'm totaly fine with that,not a deal breaker for me. I loved the first two books in this series,I had even been getting friends to read them and listen to them.

Having said that,and praising the first two books,I must say that Shattered Hourglass disappointed me. The story is decent,but I really feel that the story was rushed. Rushed through key plots (namely the mysterious government help that was given to our hero in the second book), and more importantly the finish. The book was decent all the way to the end,then at the end I felt like someone must have held a gun to the head of J.L. and told him to finish up as fast as possible. I'm not the only person I know who feels this way,several friends listened to this story while I was and we all said the same thing,rushed ending!!! The first two books are the best,this last book is so so at best. But I would say still give it a listen,but don't expect much.

I'm sorry Mr. Bourne,I love your books,but this one let me down a bit.

Some people think the book was left open ended as if there will be another one. Perhaps,but I can't see how the main character could make a return. But knowing how this books ending was so rushed,and some good plots (the arctic station) were minimalized and not really expanded upon,I don't really think that the author has any idea for another bookmark in the series and that he added "quantum" as some sort of after thought to keep the reader guessing.

The narrator did a good job.

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7 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    1 out of 5 stars

A "Morningstar-ed" Book Three

Would you try another book from J. L. Bourne and/or Jay Snyder?

I haven't given up on the author; the first two books were great. I just wont jump on buying until some reviews are posted.

What could J. L. Bourne have done to make this a more enjoyable book for you?

I'd hoped book 3 would continue in the same style as the first 2 books. The story was choppy and rushed, with huge gaps missing in the action. The radical departure makes me wonder if it was even the same author.

What reaction did this book spark in you? Anger, sadness, disappointment?

Frustration and disappointment. This was a huge missed opportunity to wrap up the story.

Any additional comments?

I understand military messages begin with a long string on numbers and letters. I get it. Listening to the narrator read them aloud is VERY annoying.

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7 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Honest review.

First, the protagonist's handle is not Killjoy, it's Killroy - And yes, that's a name that originated in WWII. Along with this, there is a lot of military jargon - Both old and new. If you know the jargon, it will add to the experience of the book. If you don't, as some of the other reviewers have mentioned, it will probably leave you a bit bewildered. COB for Captain of the Boat, COG for Continuity of Government, BUD/S for Basic Underwater Demolitions/SEAL, as examples, and of course there's a lot of ballistic and firearm jargon as well.

Second, the book has a disjointed timeline. At the beginning, I had assumed that things were happing chronologically or even concurrently. They're not, no warning is given, and it makes the book a bit hard to follow. It would have probably been a little easier if dates and times were given at the beginning of each chapter.

It's a much different book than the previous two, and a lot of detail was left out. China and Deep 6 could have been elaborated on quite a bit more. The overall listening time on this was 9 hours. It probably "should" have been around 14-15, to make it as good as the previous two. It's very fast paced, and many important plot details were just omitted. I'm going to listen to it a second time, because I just could not take in information as quickly as it was being delivered. It was absolutely not the reader's fault, either. That man is a genius with reading. The book read more like a debriefing with just main details listed with minimal environment details, character building, and in some places it would just jump from problem description to resolution, with no story telling. Not what I'm accustomed to from Bourne. I feel like I listened to an abridged version of the book instead of the original.


Overall, still a great book. Still a fan of Bourne. Think he needs to slow it back down and not write books like he has to write his own mission reports.

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6 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Solid but the ending seems a bit rushed

The final (?) book in the Day by Day series. It’s much like the first two with a mix of zombie action (although it seems a bit slower than the others) and insight from the survivors. It gives some more background on remote 6 and wraps things up rather nicely but leaves the door ajar for a possible follow on. The format is slightly different than in the first two books. The vast majority of the first two books was based on the journal of the main character. While there are some journal entries included in this book since the main characters are spread out in the world, it takes on a more third person view. If you liked the first two books you will like this one.

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