Franklin Horton is at his best with the Locker Nine series. I enjoyed every minute. Plus the performance by Kevin Pierce is outstanding.
View: kevinspierce - page 1091
More?!!
Review from The Death Dealer’s Manual →
really enjoyed
Review from Blackout →
worst start of a book ever
Review from The Traveler Series: A Post Apocalyptic/Dystopian Adventure: Books 4-6 →
it seems the author just wanted to hurt his protagonist, and not shed any light on the time between this book and the last in the series… aside from the horrible start and how it affects the series it’s not bad… same lack of firearms knowledge as usual for Tom Abraham’s with some terrible “insight”..
Great
Review from Nuclear Winter Armageddon →
great story line so far
Review from Getting Home →
I am currently on book 7. This is the first time I actually bought credits and I’m glad I did. I do think the 8 books could have been made into 5. each book is a little short. I will rate when when completed book 8. if anyone is able to share book 8 I..
Great series of books. Enjoyed the use of scripture at the start of each chapter. Jesus is Lord, the Alpha, Omega, the beginning and the end. I’m retired military and enjoyed the accuracy and detail of all that transpired in these books. We are living in the last days of this broken and sinful country…
Meh
Review from The Traveler Series →
The narrator was fairly good. The story is interesting. However, certain elements are unnecessary. Every chapter begins with a detailed announcement of date, time, number of years before or after the Scourge, then the physical location. This could have been shortened. There is a long running side story where we go back in time to..
It good
Review from Dark New World, Book 1 →
Just tired of all the survival stories leaving me TOTALLY depressed. Know I rather die than try to survive though raping, murdering and torture and any other horrible thing that can be done. Only to survive with the ability to live is destroyed becaUse the land and animaLs have been killed off that I don’t..









