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10 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
The INCREDIBLE number of inconsistencies ruin this book, September 19, 2007
What more can I say? The INCREDIBLE number of inconsistencies RUIN this book in just the first 40 pages!!!!
Gates' inability to keep track of exactly how big the monstrosities are in relation to surrounding items, including humans, is astounding.
First they are large enough to throw cars then they can't even knock down a door.
They are so large that a dog can land on one of their noses yet a simple single bullet from a handgun blows away one of their faces "from eye to jaw"??? That would happen if a human shot another human with a shotgun, but something so massive (20 feet tall) wouldn't even flinch.
Another bullet spun one of them around when hit in the arm????
One changes relative size so many times in about three pages that I just stopped reading the book.
What he should have done was draw out a monster, then cars, buildings, animals, streets in relative size to the monster so he could keep track of what items are what sizes them. Simple.
It pisses me off when writers don't take the time to think things out carefully before starting to write.
What a waste of money it is to buy a book of such incompetent writing.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Humans Have Become Scarce, September 8, 2007
Joe Burton is out jogging one morning when the world comes to an end. Glowing orbs descend on the world. They pop into people through mouths and other openings. The people instantly transform into giant monsters (twenty-feet tall or more). These monster immediately start devouring the humans around it. Within minutes life as we know it is over even if the characters don't accept it yet. Joe helps a young boy and a drug-addicted young woman. They start running and keep staying just ahead of the monsters. Eventually they manage to find a hiding place and catch a breather. Their group grows with the addition of a young woman who is an artist. Together they try to make their way out of the city and to safety.
Along the way we meet many other characters and survivor groups. We also see more and more different types of monsters. Trials and tragedy are met at almost every turn until it is discovered what the monsters and orbs are up to. They do seem to have a plan and are not just mindless eating machines. In the end the book sort of stops and one has to wonder if there will be a sequel so we can find out what happens next.
This reminded my of a Brian Keene novel. The world ends in the first few pages and we watch some survivors deal with it. But unlike Keene, this one is silly. The size of the monster is based on the original size of the victim we are told. But starting with the monster pigeon we see many cases where that just is not true. At one point our characters drop three or more stories, in a car, onto a flat warehouse roof. They survive and the roof holds. This is not the only case of physics going out the window but it is one of the biggest. The monsters are bother super strong and easily damaged. When eating people, the people's bodies act like the have been as well cooked as a roasted chicken with all the part separating easily. The globes had be destroyed with buckshot but can survive the heart of a massive explosion. The silliness goes on and on. With a little tweaking this could have been pretty good but it comes off like an issue of the Monsters Unleashed comic (or similar title). Good in a comic book sort of way but hard to take seriously.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Ignore the bad reviews, this is a decent read...., January 19, 2012
This is my first book I've read by R. Gates. I'm a fan of all horror, specifically Laymon, Koontz, Keene, Rollo and McCammon. This book is what you should expect it to be...a book about aliens taking over the world. It's in your face and takes only about 3 pages to get going. The only real problem with this book is it's length. It's 500 pages long and really could've been 350. I was starting to get a little bored with seeing the same four main characters escape near death over and over through the first few hundered pages before we get to meet some other characters and start seeing some twists. I'm not going to give anything away, but I give this author two thumbs up for the ending. Soooo many times you read books where the end is a just a let-down...particularly in horror novels. Not the case here....of course you're going to be angry that there's not a sequel for you to pick up and read right away....
My only other major complaint about this novel is about a very small detail that the author let me down on. Mr. R. Patrick Gates,(if you should read this) you make reference to some prescription narcotic medications in your novel. Unfortunately, the dosages that you describe of the various different pills are COMPETELY far off from what they really come in. This wouldn't bother the average reader, except me, as I'm a Pharmacist and wonder why you didnt just take 5 minutes to Google the various strengths of medications like Vicodin or Valium so that your book can be accurate. Other than that minor detail...I'm a fan and plan on ordering another Gates book off of Amazon!
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