The Irish End Games, Books 1-3 - Susan Kiernan-Lewis

The Irish End Games, Books 1-3

By Susan Kiernan-Lewis

  • Release Date: 2013-11-24
  • Genre: Fiction & Literature
4.5 Score: 4.5 (From 111 Ratings)

Description

The first three books of the Irish End Games take an average American family and puts them in the middle of a post-apocalyptic meltdown in a rural setting in Ireland. Free Falling shows the family "when the bomb drops" and how they're able to learn what they need to do to survive. Going Gone continues their story when Sarah is brutally taken from the home she has created in Ireland and risks life, limb and much more to return to her family. Heading Home tells the story of rescue finally coming--and how that turns into the biggest upheaval of all. 
These books are thrilling page-turners that will have you stocking your pantry for the apocalypse and wondering how well you really know your neighbors.

Reviews

  • The story is interesting

    3
    By Allenetria
    The books are interesting. Mostly people getting lost and catastrophes going on through the series. They keep me entertained and wondering what will happen next though. What bothers me are the time lines. They are all over the place. In one book the kid was 10 starting out then it says he was 9 in other books. When he is 19 it says they went there 6 years before, instead of 9 years before. The baby is born when he’s 14, then when the baby is 2 he is 19. There are miss spellings throughout as well.
  • Irish End Games

    4
    By Clay Norman
    Very good books to read and keeps you going on to wanting to read the next book in the series.
  • I'm a fan!

    4
    By Rush61
    I've really enjoyed the writings of Susan Kiernan-Lewis, having read the Maggie Newberry series and recommend it as well as the Irish End-Games series. Strong protagonists, interesting satellite characters and descriptive writing make these series of stories hold your attention. Even though some of the premises and some actions of characters are far-fetched, it doesn't matter. It's fiction, and you can believe whatever you like! I'll be moving on to the next book in this series soon. My only issue is the huge amount of typos, left out words in sentences that mean you may have to read it three times to get what it actually meant, words spelled incorrectly here & there...and the one that really bugged me - "leanbha"... An Irish word meaning child or baby. There is no A on the end of it but it is repeatedly spelled that way. It is leanbh, according to my research of the word. A good editor should catch these things.

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