Three
Written by J.A. Konrath and Ann Voss Peterson
Narrated by Angela Dawe
4/5
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Currently unavailable
Currently unavailable
About this audiobook
Time is running out for Chandler, the elite assassin whose mission to rescue her sister from a notorious black ops prison landed her at the top of the nation's Most Wanted list. Burned by her handlers and forced to work with her mortal enemy in a race to preserve the very government that wants her dead, the living weapon has become a ticking time bomb.
THREE
In saving her sister, Chandler unleashed a power-mad American president dead set on controlling the world-no matter how many millions of innocent people he must kill to do it. To stop him, Chandler will go deeper than she's ever gone before, pushing her body and mind to their absolute limits. All the while she is hunted by the one man who knows her every secret, her every hiding place-and her every weakness.
Infiltrating the White House, crashing a bullfight in Mexico City, hijacking a blimp in Toronto...these are just the beginning of the end, as the Codename: Chandler trilogy races towards its stunning conclusion.
J.A. Konrath
Joe Konrath has sold more than two million books in twenty countries. He’s written over thirty novels and over a hundred short stories in the mystery, thriller, horror, and sci-fi genres. He’s twice won the Love is Murder Award for best thriller, and has also won the Derringer Award, and the Ellery Queen Readers Choice Award, and has been nominated for many others including the Anthony, Macavity, and Gumshoe. Konrath edited the collection These Guns for Hire, and his fiction has appeared in dozens of magazines and anthologies including Ellery Queen, Alfred Hitchcock, Cemetery Dance, The Strand, Thriller edited by James Patterson, and Wolfsbane & Mistletoe edited by Charlaine Harris (True Blood). He’s considered a pioneer in self-publishing. His blog, A Newbie’s Guide to Publishing, gets several million hits per year, and Konrath has been featured in Forbes, Entertainment Weekly, Newsweek, Playboy, USA Today, Time, Woman's World, the LA Times, and the New York Times among many other periodicals. He also blogs for the Huffington Post. Find out more at www.jakonrath.com.
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Reviews for Three
66 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5ThreeLegends of the Duskwalker, Book 1By: Jay PoseyNarrated by: Luke DanielsThis book blends some wonderful things together to make a book that was excellent listening!. A book about a seeming post-apocalyptic world with techno access. It also has "Weir" that change shape and other more fantasy aspects to this sci-fi thriller. It has a lone survivor that is different from most others and he chooses to help a mom and her kid. They too end up being very different. Three is the guys name. He is a tough guy and helps her and the kid but she is not a damsel in total distress, she too has skills. It is a wild adventure and had plenty of action, creative characters, great plot, and I can't wait for book 2!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Received this to review from Netgalley. I enjoy most Angry Robot books, but this one was a cut above. They normally have new and intriguing ideas, but this was a whole world that felt organic, revealed slowly, with no unnecessary detail. The whole idea of the Weir was perfect -- enough information that they were frightening, but not so much that the mystery went out of it and left them ridiculous. They're sort of zombies. High tech zombies. They're not invulnerable, and their danger isn't hyped up unbearably -- danger comes from all around: the Weir, basic survival, and the gang on Three's heels.I didn't expect some of the twists this book took; some were obvious after another previous turning point had been passed, and yet at the same time it wasn't obvious that that would have to be the outcome. And I loved the way the characters developed: the way relationships slowly grew between them, and the way that very little could be seen as black and white.Ultimately, I don't know how to talk about this book without spoiling the experience. It's a little bit of a Western, a little bit sci-fi, a little bit horror survival story. It's absorbing and well-written, and surprised me on many fronts, and I'll rec it to everyone once it's published. If you have a Netgalley account, this is one not to be missed; if you're an Angry Robot fan, part of the Robot Army, likewise; if you're not, may I suggest that this is a most excellent place to start?
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Three is a loner, who seems to be out for just himself, when he sees a mother and her child in trouble. Against his better judgement he gets involved. He finds they are in much more dangerous trouble than he could have imagined and it becomes a race to get Cass and Wren to safety. Characters and setting grabbed me right from the start and just wouldn't let go. I loved this book and highly recommend it! The sequel comes out in late April. You can bet I will be reading that as well!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I was pleasantly surprised by this novel & it wrapped up more completely than I expected for the first of a series. As weird as the post apocalyptic world is, we slowly figure out much over the course of the novel. There were no data dumps. LOVE IT, although if you like tidy answers & everything explained, this book isn't for you. You need to read between the lines & remember the few facts that are so casually dropped. Even so, you still won't know all the answers, although I think I made some good guesses. That's why it is first in a series. This is an action packed introduction to the world & there is much more to be revealed.
The main characters are all remarkable, may be a bit too much so at times, but pretty good overall. A hardbitten man, a beautiful mother & her son are the main heroes. They're facing a main set of villains plus a world that is out to eat its own, but nothing is quite as it seems on the surface. Stereotypes mutate suddenly to add depth & deliver a kick in an understated, often bleak tone. Posey isn't afraid to use his characters hard to make his points, either. Excellent. I'm looking forward to reading the next which is due out next year, I believe.
Write faster! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Review at The Hungry Monster Review
Three is a post-apocalyptic sci-fi adventure novel. It follows a strong lone gunman type protagonist named Three, though gunman is probably not the right word as ammunition is hard to come by and he dispatches foes with is sword more often than not. In the beginning of the story he is a bounty hunter that enjoys his solitary lifestyle until one day he finds a woman and her son in need of help. To him there just more beggars amongst many that are starving, scared and in need of help. He doesn’t really help strangers without it profiting himself in some way, but for reasons he can’t explain, he wants to help these people and changes, for the better, in the process.
Before I go into the rest of the book let me first say that there is a lot in this book that the reader is left to assume, which the author did intentionally. There are some big ideas that are not fully explained, but there is enough outlying details that, if you have a good imagination, you can just guess. But if you don’t, well don’t worry. The author promises to reveal more of the world and the Weir in the following books of the Dusk Walker series. I’ll preface my assumptions with ‘I believe’ to denote what I think happened.
The two strangers that he helps are a woman named Cass and her son named Wren who is about six years old. Cass is a ‘chemic’, which is someone that can metabolize different chemicals to augment her natural ability (which is something that is needed in this new world). Their on the run from a group of people that steal secrets from people’s heads. Their leader, Asher, is a powerful man that can not only steal secrets by reading your mind, but he can also control you, the reason for this I’ll give later. Asher and his crew, named RushRuin, which is an assemblage of similar bad to the bone people like Three, are chasing Cass and Wren because Wren is believed to have powers similar to Asher’s. Three decides to lead them out of the city and into the wasteland where the Weir roam.
The Weir are cybernetically reanimated humans with ice blue eyes with, I believe, rotting skin and the like as, I believe, they look like zombies with some electronic upgrades inside of them. Not much detail is given about the Weir, only that they come out at night, for reasons unknown, and they want to kill people, for reasons unknown.
Three takes Cass and Wren out into the wasteland and together they fight off the Weir and Asher’s crew while visiting different cities and encountering different, interesting people. It’s very much an adventure novel in this sense, but the most fascinating part of the story lies with what is unexplained.
Everyone in the world is implanted with technology at birth that lets them access satellites still orbiting the Earth to retrieve information, kind of like accessing the internet, and also lets them upload their ‘soul’ before they die to, I believe, a database sort of like heaven. If you read a book called Surface Detail by Ian M. Banks (very good book), you would get an idea of how this works. How people got these implants or how they keep installing them in people in the bleak world they now live in is not explained, but should be explored in future novels. These implants are what Asher uses to control people. He has a special connection with this technology, the satellites and the ambient ‘signal’ of people.
The world is filled with different kinds of left over technology, gene modifications, implants, chemical enhancements, even the dust that floats around is intelligently designed, which is like smartdust, again something that will, hopefully, be explained in future novels. There are even times when Three is walking through the dead world and he can see some lights on in a window of an abandoned building from technology that is still working oblivious to its own irrelevancy (yea, that’s a word).
The book does not really describe what the Weir are or why the Earth was destroyed, it will slowly be revealed through the series, but I can guess. I think that it has something to do with the Seam that the characters encounter 2/3 of the way through the book. I believe, this is a huge swath of land where, maybe, an asteroid or the like impacted the Earth. This along with the appearance of the Weir led to the downfall of humanity. I believe the Weir are a byproduct of experiments on humans that led to everyone being implanted with upgrades at birth. But this is all just conjecture. The story itself is well written. Reading was slow because I got the sense that every word was important and the story could change quickly with just a few words. The beauty of this novel lies in the nuanced detail of Three’s interactions with the world and other characters. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Thank you to NetGalley and Angry Robot for providing me with a pre-release copy of Three in exchange for an honest review. This futuristic, post-apocalyptic science fiction novel piqued my interest as soon as I saw it, and I knew even from reading its simple and brief description that I definitely had to check it out.The story opens, introducing us to a world where society has crumbled and human activity only exists in pockets of safe zones across a devastated landscape. When the sun sets, creatures known as the Weir come forth and the night is filled with their glowing blue eyes and sounds of their electrifying howls. The setting is unmistakably post-apocalyptic and even has the slight feel of a western, but at the same time it appears a significant portion of technology has survived. Throughout this novel you will encounter characters utilizing high-tech weapons, implants, chems, mechanical limbs and the like.The book features our eponymous protagonist Three, a lone gunman who has turned to bounty hunting to make a living. One day, he emerges from the wasteland to collect on a successful job and encounters a distressed woman pleading for help with her young son in tow. Three has always worked alone and prefers it that way, so he is surprised to find himself accepting the mantel of protector to Cass and her boy Wren. To keep themselves alive, the trio must go on the run to escape the merciless adversaries who are after them.I remember finishing the prologue and being a little unsure about what to make of it, which really isn't all that unusual given how it typically takes me at least a few chapters to get a feel for a book. But then I read the first chapter which introduces Three, and I was hooked. There's just something about him that makes the reader want to learn more, his character being a man of few words notwithstanding. While Three may play to the familiar dangerous-looking-but-honorable-tough-guy archetype with simple and straightforward motivations, the author definitely knows how to present his character as someone you want to root for right away.I also liked the trust and respect that develops between Three and Cass over the course of their journey. To me it felt really natural and gradual, even with the many trying yet justifiable obstacles along the way. Cass loves her son Wren and guards him with the ferocity of a lioness protecting her cub, so it's such an engrossing process to see her views evolve as she begins to accept Three and make room for him in their lives.I very much enjoyed the setting as well, which I talked a bit about at the beginning of this review. There are elements of it that will be familiar to readers of post-apocalyptic science fiction, but it also feels unique. My one regret is that the book didn't provide as much context as I'd have liked, such as how the world became this way, how some of this strange and awesome technology came about, what gave rise to the Weir and where they go during the daytime and how they turn others into one of them, etc. None of this information is necessary to understand and follow the story, of course, but my curiosity gets the better of me sometimes, and it sucks having these questions hang at the back of my mind as I'm reading, especially for such a fascinating world.Needless to say, for a debut novel, I thought this was very impressive. Three may be a little light on plot, but I like that it makes up for this with its fast pacing and well-written action sequences, sometimes alternating between the viewpoints of the various characters like you see in movies, creating this atmosphere of danger and suspense.If his goal was to leave me wanting to know more about these characters and this world, then Jay Posey definitely succeeded. I wasn't sure before if this was going to be a series and if there were going to be any more books, since the story's ending tied up rather nice and neatly (which was a nice plus). But then some digging around showed me that Legends of the Duskwalker is indeed going to be a series, so I'll be sure to be on the lookout for more by this author in the future. There's still so much I want to know about the history of some of these characters, how they got to where they were, and what else is in store for them.