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Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile (Book 2) Reviews

Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile (Book 2)

  • ISBN13: 9781439177525
  • Condition: New
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The first book of Day by Day Armageddon took us deep into the mind of a military officer and survivor as he made a New Year’s resolution to start keeping a journal. The man kept his resolution and brought to us the fall of humanity, day by day. We see the man transition from the life that you and I live to the prospect of fighting for his very survival against the overwhelming hordes of the dead. We see him bleed, we see him make mistakes, we witness him evolve. The highly anticipated sequel t

Rating: (out of 144 reviews)

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5 Responses to “Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile (Book 2) Reviews”

  1. Patrick S. Dorazio Says:

    Review by Patrick S. Dorazio for Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile (Book 2)
    Rating:
    Day by Day Armageddon was one of the first books I read when I became interested in zombie literature, to go hand in hand with my fascination with zombie movies, almost exactly four years ago. As is the case with many people who enjoyed its personal approach to the apocalypse as told by an active officer in the military, I have waited all this time for the long hoped for sequel. Since J.L. Bourne is himself an active member of the military, my guess is that he was only able to write bits and pieces of this update of the saga between active tours of duty. While it may have been frustration for us fans of the first book to have waited this long, I have to say that the wait was well worth it.

    An issue that some people had with the first book was perhaps the intentional diary approach to the book, with typos left in and even the text a bit rougher than you would get from a traditional novel. That is no longer an issue, as the format of this book is more traditional, with no errors in the text, intentional or not. I myself had no issues with that previously, but with it gone, it is one less point of criticism that someone may have with this type of storytelling. We once again get a diary of a military officer facing down the zombie apocalypse and this one picks up where the last journal ended, under ground, in the nuclear missile silo the author has dubbed Hotel 23, shortly after an attack by hostile survivors that failed to penetrate its defenses.

    This is once again a personal journey of one man, with other people entering and exiting the story at different intervals. The characters in the first novel that are with the main character in Hotel 23 remain, but do not play a pivotal role here. The story has more dramatic swings to it than the previous tale, where it was mainly one man gathering who he could with him to find any place they could to survive. In this story, the military is reintroduced and play a huge role in the goings on of this tale. This allows the story to progress beyond what could have amounted to a group of people just trying to hide out underground for the duration of the apocalypse. Instead, the main character is required to make tough decisions and take on new responsibilities that will lead him away from H23 for the bulk of this tale and once again make this a intriguing saga of one man’s path, out in the open, during the zombie apocalypse.

    My favorite character, and one which I am gathering much more will be revealed about in a future journal, is Saien, who our main character meets during his desperate travels and appears to be equally as capable (if not more so) than the main character at surviving in zed infested territory. His background is perhaps not completely shrouded in mystery, but it is clear there is more to the man than what the diary indicates. Suffice it to say, he is an interesting addition to the characters in the book, and the only one that shared a great deal of pages with the main character.

    While there is a bit of romance afoot for our hero, it is certainly not a significant part of this journal. Personal interactions like that are kept to a minimum, with some character commentary that reveals bits and pieces, but the action is what the author targets, as is natural in a journal format such as this. While there is a great deal of military terminology, the author goes to significant lengths to make the layman, like me, feel comfortable with the equipment and hardware being used in the story. This is not a story about an every day guy beating the odds and surviving, but about someone who has gone through survival training, has a great familiarity with weaponry, hand to hand combat, and battle tactics most of us are not privy to, which makes this book fairly unique among most zombie stories written.

    I personally enjoyed the gritty, personal perspective that this book and the previous novel have. A journal format does have its weaknesses: minimal dialogue, limited perspective, and by necessity, we know that the person who is penning the journal is okay because they continue to write about their exploits day after day. But done well, it is a compelling format, and it is hard to say that anyone out there does it any better than J.L. Bourne.

  2. James Ware Says:

    Review by James Ware for Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile (Book 2)
    Rating:
    J L Bourne’s “Beyond Exile”, the second in the “Day by Day Armageddon” series, may well be the best yet.

    Bourne has grown as a writer. He is better at handling his characters and his scenes.

    “Beyond Exile” starts exactly where the last book left off and it shows no signs of the dreaded “sequel lag”.

    In keeping with my tradition of not offering up spoilers, I will say that you will meet new characters, connect with other survivors and encounter mysterious factions with unfathomable agendas.

    “Beyond Exile” is a great read and I give you fair warning: once you start reading it, you will be useless until you are done.

  3. Duxman Says:

    Review by Duxman for Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile (Book 2)
    Rating:
    The original Day By Day is one of my all time favorite zombie books. I read it in one weekend. And re-read it again several times because it is so much fun.

    The sequel (in the first two chapters) has already exceed all my expectations. Mr. Bourne’s personality and James Bondish dry sense of humor is coming out as the 1980′s style – action one liners are coming out and they are funny!

    More adventure and more zombie death. What more can you ask for.

    Oh yeah – don’t take six years to write the next book!

  4. Andrew Scott Says:

    Review by Andrew Scott for Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile (Book 2)
    Rating:
    I loved the first book and consumed this one in short order on its release. It’s an enthralling tale with twists and turns that have the ring of authenticity to them. The diary style affords a no-nonsense approach that adds to this at the expense of some suspense at times.

    This, the second book, widens the scope and brings in a lot of additional elements. There’s a strong emphasis on the military and this seems logical. There’s lots of military hardware which aids the realism but sometimes I wished for a glossary–sometimes the writer forgets to explain all of his military jargon.

    There seem to be some squandered opportunities. For example at one point our protagonist gains possession of some heavy duty, automated firepower but instead of using it to aid a last-ditch escape or overcome terrible odds it’s literally expended out of view and with no impact on the story. Later in the story a pitch battle is merely sketched out in a few pages when it could have been told in gripping detail. No time is given to characters so we feel no sense of loss at the terrible cost of the event.

    It seems as if the author loses patience with the story arc (or his publishers deadline elapses?) and abruptly ends the book with a poorly explored but stunning series of revelations. We’re left in no doubt a third volume is necessary to tell the tale but it’s such a sudden and unsatisfying way to end the book. Where volume one felt like a story that could stand alone this one is merely truncated. Exciting, compelling, impossible to put down but incomplete to a degree that is much less satisfying than most middle volumes in a trilogy. For all it’s flaws this is still essential reading in the genre and I look forward to the next (and final?) episode. I just hope the writer has more time to do the story justice next time around.

  5. recon three Says:

    Review by recon three for Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile (Book 2)
    Rating:
    The follow up to the literally “underground” classic. DBDA beyond exile picks up where the original journal formatted book left off. Where the journal form was part of the appeal of the original, the second book picks up the action effortlessly and runs with it. A well written book is an achievement by any measure, to do it while actively deployed in the defense of our country is nothing short of amazing. No plot review or spoilers, J.L Bourne worked to hard for me to spoil any of it for him. Buy the book, and enjoy. Welcome to the underground.

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