Define Containing Books Echo (Species Intervention #6609 #2)
| Title | : | Echo (Species Intervention #6609 #2) |
| Author | : | J.K. Accinni |
| Book Format | : | Kindle Edition |
| Book Edition | : | 1st edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 219 pages |
| Published | : | August 26th 2012 by Skinny Leopard media |
| Categories | : | Science Fiction. Fantasy. Horror. Aliens. Wildlife. Thriller. Apocalyptic. Post Apocalyptic |

J.K. Accinni
Kindle Edition | Pages: 219 pages Rating: 4.16 | 378 Users | 110 Reviews
Rendition Conducive To Books Echo (Species Intervention #6609 #2)
Netty’s influence transcends a full century as the United States evolves to a point of politically driven economic collapse. The year is 2033 as a young mother, abused by her shiftless husband, heroically decides to remove her two sickly children, Scotty and Abby, from the mean streets of their government subsidized tenement town of Short Hills, New Jersey to the hills and old farmland of Sussex County. There they unite with a Latino family that adopted Jose, a young boy from Costa Rica, traumatized at the age of seven by the brutal murder of his parents and the kidnapping of his infant sister.The two families unite to pool finances, creating the love and bonds that will enable them to survive the psychotic attention of Armoni, a soul damaged beyond redemption, discovery of Baby’s miraculous offspring, Echo; and their subsequent body changes. Through the efforts of Echo who develops an unexplained passion for the curly haired dog, Barney, they flee the clutches of Armoni after the murder of Armoni’s sidekicks by Echo, to Sarasota, Florida, one of the last remaining enclaves of wealth in the U.S.
Scotty learns to utilize Echo as a co-conspirator in his intrigue to thwart the efforts of heinous people that prey on the lives of creatures in their environmentally rich new home, where the insidious miscreant, Armoni, tracks them; dragging along Ginger Mae, a New York City prostitute looking for opportunity with her mute child, Daisy; bringing brutality and violence to all.
Having fallen in love, the young Abby and Jose draw close, only to be separated by the transcendental Netty, who tries to use Abby as a conduit in her plan to rescue as much wildlife as they can before despicable political events bring on the specter of Armageddon.
Mention Books Toward Echo (Species Intervention #6609 #2)
| Edition Language: | English |
| Series: | Species Intervention #6609 #2 |
Rating Containing Books Echo (Species Intervention #6609 #2)
Ratings: 4.16 From 378 Users | 110 ReviewsDiscuss Containing Books Echo (Species Intervention #6609 #2)
My Review will contain MANY Spoilers! Please do NOT continue on if you don't want to know what goes on in this book.This one was a little bit harder for me to get into feeling it. We get a new gang of Characters, out with the old and in with the new! Writing Style stays the same, Characters POV's jump from one to the next. The storyline bounced from Scotty to Echo then Jose. Barney was another constant fixture as well.Thought some facts could have been left out about Jose because they seemed toI absolutely loved Baby, and really wanted to read Echo. I too couldn't get past the first CHAPTER. I understand of course that authors must set up a fictional world and the opinions of the characters doesn't reflect those of the author, BUT the intro to the dystopian world isn't from a character POV is a third person narrative claiming to describe 'facts' that are a mix of highly charged political vitriol and out right conspiracy crackpot science. Many dystopian stories are based on implausible

After having read the first book in this series awhile ago, and due to some things that bugged me about the first book, I wasnt really eager to start on the second book. Id thought Id wait awhile before reading Echo for fear that the same issues that bothered me in Baby, would pop up again in Echo. Alas, my fears were unnecessary and I ended up enjoying Echo far more than I did Baby. I was so focused on the issues that plagued me in the first book, I failed to notice how exquisitely J.K. Accinni
I really enjoyed this book. I have to say I'm glad that I continued on from the first book (Baby) because Echo was a great read. I was a bit hesitant because of the brutality in Baby, but there was only one incident in this book. I found myself constantly thinking about this book whenever I put the book down to do something. My mind, no matter what I was doing, would drift back to the book and wonder what is going to happen next, or think to myself, what does this mean, or that mean, or will the
This book has little to save it from sheer mediocrity. The story begins with a political rant about the rich and poor that goes way beyond what is necessary to set the scene. I don't like to be cruel in my reviews, but again, like the first book in this series, the narrative is somewhat lacking. Immediately upon closing the broad political update to take us into the year 2033, there is a demonstration of violence and the description of the brutal rape and killing of a seventeen year old girl. It
I Am blown away by this series J K Accinni has done it again. I am more in love with this series than I was with the first book. Again all I can say really is you have got to read this series. J K Accinni has really out done herself with this series. I gotta have more I am addicted to these books.


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