Many survivors took refuge in falloutbunkers known as Vaults, unaware each Vault was designed to perform sociological and psychological experiments on the Vault Dwellers.
More than 200 years later in 2296, a young woman named Lucy leaves behind her home in Vault 33 to venture out into the dangerously unforgiving wasteland of a devastated Los Angeles to look for her father, who had been kidnapped.
Along the way, she meets a Brotherhood of Steel squire and a ghoul bounty hunter, each has their own mysterious pasts and agendas to settle.
Personally, I found the characters cliche. The plot unsophisticated.
Perhaps the author intended it to be easily turned into a screenplay for a future movie.
On the other hand, it took me 70% of the book to guess the identity of the bad guys.
… a creepy and creative variation on Jurassic Park.
In the near future, advances in gene editing have led to breakthroughs in de-extinction, bringing prehistoric mammals back to life by rebuilding their genomes and muting genes for aggression.
The scientists behind the project have focused on reviving herbivorous megafauna, including mammoths and Irish elk, with the animals allowed to roam inside the spacious confines of Colorado’s Erebus Resort, a luxury attraction near the Rocky Mountains.
When honeymooners Mark and Olivia Gunnerson fall victim to a savage attack at Erebus—their tent is slashed open, pools of blood are left at the scene, and authorities find no signs of their remains—the incident brings Frankie Cash from the Colorado Bureau of Investigation to the resort.
She initially believes the attack to be the work of eco-terrorists who object to Erebus’s mission, but as she investigates, more bodies pile up, and the evidence points toward a threat more terrifying than she could have imagined. …
James Patterson is the only author. That’s unusual as Maxine Paetro is typically his co-author. And it’s a novella.
Set in San Francisco, the novels follow a group of women from different professions relating to investigating crime as they work together to solve murders.
Instead of typical Baker Street consulting detectivry, this is some kind of supernatural horror story.
This one begins in 1880. Watson has returned from Afghanistan an invalid, but the cause of his injury was not as previously stated a Jezail bullet during the Battle of Maiwand, but rather as a result of his first brush with the occult.
It is not to be his last.
He is dragged by accident into one of Holmes’ cases, and from there their friendship grows.
Holmes has been investigating a series of bizarre deaths in the East End district of Shadwell; poor, unfortunate men and women are dying at the height of the new moon, their bodies aged and shrunken in an improbable manner. …
Colin from Accounts is an Australian comedy television series created and written by husband-and-wife team Patrick Brammall and Harriet Dyer, who also star as the show’s main characters. …
Set in Sydney, Australia and centred on Ashley (Harriet Dyer) and Gordon (Patrick Brammall), two singles who are brought together by a car accident and an injured dog whom they name Colin (from Accounts).
Ashley and Gordon are flawed, funny people who choose each other after being brave enough to show their true selves, scars and all, as they navigate life together.
Worth watching. Though I did feel the series got weaker towards the end.
Clare Mackintosh is a British author and former police officer..
She became a full-time writer in 2011. And in 2014 publishedI Let You Go, a best seller.
It’s intense.
Well written.
There are plot twists that surprised me.
Jenna Gray has rented a spare cottage in a small Welsh town on the coast.
She’s timid and doesn’t interact with many people, just her landlord and a woman at a local shop. She’s running away from the death of a child.
In parallel, Detective Inspector Ray Stevens and a female rookie are working on the case of a young boy killed in a hit-and-run right in front of his mother.
It’s yet another hit psychological thriller — and I’m starting to get sick of psychological thrillers. 😀
BUT this is a good one.
None of This is True refers to unreliable narrators. The story will keep you guessing.
Josie Fair and Alix Summer share the same birthday. Born in the same hospital on the same day, and now, at the age of forty five, they share a curiosity about how their lives might have turned out differently.
Bumping into one another by accident, Alix (a podcaster) strikes on an idea for a series called …
“Hi I’m Your birthday Twin”
She begins to interview Josie — who tells of a very damaged upbringing and family life.
It’s an intense book. Dark and sad.
Kirkus Reviews noted that the book was “hard to read but hard to look away from.”
It follows four women who were part of a girl group named Girls5eva, which was briefly popular around the year 2000 before fading into one-hit-wonder status.
Now unfulfilled in their various lives, they reunite to try to find musical success again.
I quite like Daniel Breaker as Scott, Dawn’s husband. He plays the one normal person in the show.