Extermination Day eBook William Turnage
Download As PDF : Extermination Day eBook William Turnage
Extermination Day – January 15, 2038 – The day the world dies. It begins with a surprise meteor shower. Within hours millions become sick. The horrible virus quickly spreads, killing everyone in its path. Remnants of world governments soon discover that this is no ordinary virus. It was engineered to eradicate the human race.
Congressman Jeff Madison is one of the few surviving members of the US government. He and a team of scientists at a secret underground base must figure out who is behind the attack. Their only hope may be Project Chronos, the world’s first operational time machine.
Jeff and his team need to find a way to go back in time and warn humanity of the coming apocalypse. But what can they do when the very air they breathe can kill them, an overwhelming malevolent force is hunting them, and a traitor is undermining their efforts at every turn?
It’s a fight for survival throughout time with humanity’s past, present, and future at stake.
*** Includes two free bonus short stories!
Extermination Day eBook William Turnage
I had high hopes for this book as it seemed like a clever idea. I've actually enjoyed other stories based on nano-bot technology (i.e.: the "Stray" series by Höst) and hoped for something as good in "Extermination Day." Unfortunately, I had to stop reading by the end of chapter 24, about 78%. Why? Read on:**WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD**
1. For one thing - as another reviewer mentioned - ALL US politicians are portrayed as lecherous pigs. EVERY politician in the story, from Pres. on down, was lusting after other women and also fondly recalled previous affairs. (Even the alien, but that's for another gripe.)
2. For another, most characters seemed very stereotypical and not very realistic. They were gung-ho American men, helpless women, mindless sheep, or sleazy bad guys with no in-between.
3. The science behind the attack didn't seem believable. Tiny nano-bots were able to eat humans and even hardened metal with no problem. Granted they're from a higher intelligence, but I kept wondering, where did the stuff go? Supposedly they could create more of themselves by eating other stuff, but I just couldn't buy into it. Oh, and those same bots could also repair the human body, even rebuild arms and legs and internal organs. So where did they get the materials to do all that?
4. I already mentioned that all politicians were sex crazed, but guess what? So was the alien monster! Yes, to my amazement, every creature in the universe apparently lusts after our human women! I didn't see any rapes 'completed' by 78% of the way through, but there were two attempted rapes by the aliens in that time. I finally decided that the women in the story were only there for one purpose: to be alluring and to be used for sex with the male characters, whether it was from low-life American politicians or evil monster aliens. Call me a prude, but I found that disgusting and repulsive.
5. Time travel. I have no idea how the author kept all the time travel straight, but I couldn't. One guy was fighting bad bots and was about to die in a cave in the past when he was actually rescued by himself from the future, but he also 'died' while saving himself and the girl he'd left to die in the past because he'd felt so guilty for leaving her to die in the past. Also, the main bad guy in one place appeared to be someone totally different yet exactly the same person as the main bad guy in another place. And he was causing trouble and trying to rape a different woman in each place! (..are you confused yet..?)
6. For me, anyway, all the constant disasters and problems got extremely irritating, and actually boring if you can believe it. I still kind of wanted to find out who or what was behind the attacks so I kept reading, but after awhile I started skipping sentenses, then paragraphs, and then pages, and I finally started skipping entire chapters, and STILL the constant disasters kept coming. And then came the attempts at rape by the over-sexed alien and that's when I remembered that this book is continued in the next volume and more than likely I wouldn't find out anything in this book, so I just stopped. I decided I didn't really care how it ended, though I suspect the time travelers are able to reset the world before it happens somehow. But again, I just didn't care.
**END SPOILERS**
Now I'll admit I'm not really big on apocalypse type disaster stories, but I have read some that I've enjoyed. The main problem I had with this story is that it did not seem real at all, in characters, dialog, actions, or plot. On the other hand, it did have TONS of violence, so if all you want is non-stop killing and blood then this story might be worth a try. As for me, I cannot recommend it.
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Extermination Day eBook William Turnage Reviews
This was a free book I got a couple of weeks ago. I read the whole thing. That alone gets it 2 stars in my personal rating system. It was better than the average 2-star book I have rated so I gave it 3 stars.
I see it as a fun read, with a storyline that has a lot of potential, but wandered off into way too many directions to make for a really good story.
A virus kills off most of the world, leaving only a few people alive who just happened to be in some sealed environment somewhere. Turns out the virus is a nanomachine that is far advanced beyond anything anyone on Earth can make.
There is a bunch of pretty goofy stuff and eventually it turns into a time travel story.
This book started out in a very interesting day with an attack of a virus all over the earth that kills people quickly, leaving very few survivors. This book is the story of some of those survivors and their efforts to survive and change what's happened. The characters are believable for the most part and are presented in a way that makes you really care about what happens to them. I have a hard time with ideas of time travel. It just poses too many questions about the past affecting the future and the future affecting the past.
I would give the book 5 stars if it came anywhere near to solving the issues presented; but, alas, we have to buy the sequel. Now, I will say that I like sequels, but not when I'm forced to read it. I think that's a cheap trick of the author and publisher to get me to spend more money. "Extermination Day" is a quick read and keeps you interested from the beginning to the end. I would recommend this, but only if you don't mind waiting for the sequel to find out what's going on.
Be prepared to be pulled in and reading far longer than you might otherwise. This is a fast-moving book, with lots happening. That being said, it is not a particularly deep or philosophical book. It looks at time travel a bit differently than many stories today. The "Butterfly Effect" and many time travel paradoxes are dealt with in a way not many stories do these days.
Character-wise, I think they could have been a bit stronger and their back-stories built up some. That said, I was happy with what was there for most of them. Even the main character has his own flaws; there are no real "super-characters" (best, brightest, most intuitive, uber-genius, etc), although there are a couple that are close, mostly on the "evil team", so to speak. There is at least one that we are not sure about at the end of the book, since he seemed to be for both sides depending on when things were happening.
Some people seemed to object to the many concepts brought into the book (time travel, alternate reality, aliens, etc). I thought they were handle fairly well; though it is one huge unanswered question at the end of the book. It is definitely part of a series, though the main story ties up well enough to leave the reader satisfied.
Either the author has repaired many of the grammatical mistkes, or some reviewers are very sensitive to them. There still enough to be mildly annoying, as it seems most of the free books have, but I did not find them to be particularly detrimental to enjoying the story. Overall, this is a very good read. I still have yet to check out the short stories (inter-book) that are freely available, but I plan to. This is a series that makes me want to keep reading; there are not a lot that do that to me.
I had high hopes for this book as it seemed like a clever idea. I've actually enjoyed other stories based on nano-bot technology (i.e. the "Stray" series by Höst) and hoped for something as good in "Extermination Day." Unfortunately, I had to stop reading by the end of chapter 24, about 78%. Why? Read on
**WARNING SPOILERS AHEAD**
1. For one thing - as another reviewer mentioned - ALL US politicians are portrayed as lecherous pigs. EVERY politician in the story, from Pres. on down, was lusting after other women and also fondly recalled previous affairs. (Even the alien, but that's for another gripe.)
2. For another, most characters seemed very stereotypical and not very realistic. They were gung-ho American men, helpless women, mindless sheep, or sleazy bad guys with no in-between.
3. The science behind the attack didn't seem believable. Tiny nano-bots were able to eat humans and even hardened metal with no problem. Granted they're from a higher intelligence, but I kept wondering, where did the stuff go? Supposedly they could create more of themselves by eating other stuff, but I just couldn't buy into it. Oh, and those same bots could also repair the human body, even rebuild arms and legs and internal organs. So where did they get the materials to do all that?
4. I already mentioned that all politicians were sex crazed, but guess what? So was the alien monster! Yes, to my amazement, every creature in the universe apparently lusts after our human women! I didn't see any rapes 'completed' by 78% of the way through, but there were two attempted rapes by the aliens in that time. I finally decided that the women in the story were only there for one purpose to be alluring and to be used for sex with the male characters, whether it was from low-life American politicians or evil monster aliens. Call me a prude, but I found that disgusting and repulsive.
5. Time travel. I have no idea how the author kept all the time travel straight, but I couldn't. One guy was fighting bad bots and was about to die in a cave in the past when he was actually rescued by himself from the future, but he also 'died' while saving himself and the girl he'd left to die in the past because he'd felt so guilty for leaving her to die in the past. Also, the main bad guy in one place appeared to be someone totally different yet exactly the same person as the main bad guy in another place. And he was causing trouble and trying to rape a different woman in each place! (..are you confused yet..?)
6. For me, anyway, all the constant disasters and problems got extremely irritating, and actually boring if you can believe it. I still kind of wanted to find out who or what was behind the attacks so I kept reading, but after awhile I started skipping sentenses, then paragraphs, and then pages, and I finally started skipping entire chapters, and STILL the constant disasters kept coming. And then came the attempts at rape by the over-sexed alien and that's when I remembered that this book is continued in the next volume and more than likely I wouldn't find out anything in this book, so I just stopped. I decided I didn't really care how it ended, though I suspect the time travelers are able to reset the world before it happens somehow. But again, I just didn't care.
**END SPOILERS**
Now I'll admit I'm not really big on apocalypse type disaster stories, but I have read some that I've enjoyed. The main problem I had with this story is that it did not seem real at all, in characters, dialog, actions, or plot. On the other hand, it did have TONS of violence, so if all you want is non-stop killing and blood then this story might be worth a try. As for me, I cannot recommend it.
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