Ratings5
Average rating3
When the end of the world comes, do you want to be the first to go? Or the last to survive? Kasker Rampart: a derelict refinery platform moored in the Artic Ocen. A skeleton crew of fifteen fight boredom and despair as they wait for a relief ship to take them home. They took the job to escape the world, they didn't expect the world to end.
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1 primary bookOutpost is a 1-book series first released in 2011 with contributions by Adam Baker.
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After sleeping on it, I'm revising my review (from a 3 to a 2) on this book. When I woke up this morning there was something bothering me about the story and I realized what it was: the story doesn't work in a technical way.
Here's why: The ending and particularly the climax don't do anything about the character's struggles throughout the book.
Here's where the spoilers start:
The main character (Jane) does all of her growth and changes at the front end of the book - she gets into shape, she becomes a fighter, she teaches herself to throw a knife, etc. etc.
And then we just see her existing after that.
Seriously, spoilers ahead!
The book's final antagonist arrives through some miracle and the antagonist doesn't make sense - Nikki arrives back at the island almost impossibly. She managed to fight the current of the ocean and sail all the way back up stream (through the storms) to arrive back at the island with little time passing.
And the antagonist doesn't make any sense! Nail was already set up to be our antagonist. Seemingly, Jane's attempts at bettering herself throughout the story were in direct reaction to the strength that Nail already had. She learned to throw a knife 30 meters when he could only throw a knife 20 meters. She was preparing for him. And the confrontation between the two never happened.
Also, the action of the climax doesn't make sense - Nikki went through all the trouble to capture two characters and lure Jane to her - only to ask her to stay. Jane says no and then just leaves...
What?
Sure, there's a little bit of a battle (very little) but everyone gets off scot-free from the climax with little to no struggle (except for one character I'll mention in a moment). And, we don't see Jane's changes in a struggle against the antagonist. I kept waiting for Jane's newly-developed knife throwing skills to save the day but she NEVEN EVEN THEW A KNIFE!!!
So, to sum it up: the climax of this story is broken. The antagonist should have either been Nail - or, at the very least we should have gotten a clearer sense of Nikki's journey back (or perhaps even better, discovered that she never left to begin with and just imagined her trip). Jane should have demonstrated all of her growth during the climax (through a physical struggle against the antagonist) and finally - I won't mention who it is - but the death of one of the main characters at the end of the story served absolutely no purpose...
Don't get me wrong, I finished this book and even enjoyed reading it - It's just that (as it is) the story is incomplete.
No great literature but fun. When I first started the story I was hoping for a different angle on the un-dead. I was disappointed and nearly abandoned it but I am glad I persevered. By the end I was quite invested in the fate of the occupants of the oil rig and the fate of the infected who turn out to be, not zombies but...well, you'll have to read it if you want to know. So yes, there was a new take on the zombie apocalypse.