Amazon Customer
- 1
- revisión
- 1
- voto útil
- 1
- clasificación
-
Robert Kirkman's The Walking Dead: Invasion
- De: Jay Bonansinga
- Narrado por: Fred Berman
- Duración: 9 h y 39 m
- Versión completa
-
General
-
Narración:
-
Historia
Out of the ashes of a devastated Woodbury, Georgia, two opposing camps of ragtag survivors develop - each one on a collision course with the other. Underground, in the labyrinth of ancient tunnels and mine shafts, Lilly Caul and her motley crew of senior citizens, misfits, and children struggle to build a new life. But a secret ambition still burns in Lilly's heart and soul.
-
-
Well written zombie king theme
- De Tilo en 11-05-15
- Robert Kirkman's The Walking Dead: Invasion
- De: Jay Bonansinga
- Narrado por: Fred Berman
Sassy Girls, Deadly Sins
Revisado: 05-09-16
Lilly, the simply pleasant small town girlie girl with a southern charm and a bit of the sweet Georgia lines peachy demeanor, is a solid lead role in these series. With the Holy roller Jeremiah fused into the apocalyptic wasteland of rotted flesh soulless dwellers, it makes for a double dose of horror and suspense. Having lost the above ground paradise called home, to a horde of endlessly feeding walking dead human shells, Lilly and her posse of Woodbury survivors must live in the underground tunnels below the once peaceful town they'd strived so hard to create once before.
Eternal life has a heavy price as brother Jeremiah soon learns. Power struggles amongst both groups take place, but to no one else can the plan of redemption and revolution be executed out by other than Miss Lilly. Furthermore there is not one of his disciples that could reign down the terror of his religious wrath and achieve his goal of bringing all who is still amongst the living to the rapture, other than Jeremiah himself.
Overall it's a good read. Nothing ground breaking, but it builds characters and continously delivers action packed moments.
Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.
Has calificado esta reseña.
Reportaste esta reseña