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Sean Platt

Author of Yesterday's Gone: Season One

145 Works 1,969 Members 80 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Sean Platt

Series

Works by Sean Platt

Yesterday's Gone: Season One (2011) 293 copies, 12 reviews
Invasion: The End is Only Beginning (2015) — Author — 204 copies, 12 reviews
Yesterday's Gone: Episode 1 (2011) 126 copies, 4 reviews
Z 2134 (2012) 77 copies, 3 reviews
The Beam: Season One (2013) 73 copies, 3 reviews
Yesterday's Gone: Season Three (2016) 69 copies, 2 reviews
Yesterday's Gone: Season Two (2016) 66 copies, 3 reviews
Yesterday's Gone (2019) 52 copies
Contact: Find the Missing. Fear the Found. (2015) 49 copies, 3 reviews
Colonization (2015) 34 copies, 1 review
Yesterday's Gone: Episode 2 (2016) 30 copies, 2 reviews
Robot Proletariat: Season One (2013) 29 copies, 2 reviews
Yesterday's Gone: Season Four (2016) 26 copies, 4 reviews
Dead City (Dead World Book 1) (2016) — Author — 23 copies, 2 reviews
The Tomorrow Gene (2017) 22 copies
Annihilation (2015) 22 copies
Judgment (2016) 20 copies
Z 2135 (Z 2134 Series) (2013) 20 copies, 1 review
WhiteSpace: Season One (2013) 19 copies, 1 review
The Dream Engine (2014) — Author — 19 copies, 1 review
Extinction (2016) 18 copies
The Beam: Episode 1 (2013) 18 copies, 2 reviews
Resurrection (2016) 16 copies
Monstrous (2013) 16 copies, 1 review
The Island (2023) 15 copies, 2 reviews
The Secret Within (2023) 15 copies
Burnout (2022) 14 copies
Pattern Black (2022) 11 copies
Yesterday's Gone: Episode 6 (2016) 11 copies
Crash (2017) 11 copies
The Beam: Season Two (2016) 11 copies
Available Darkness: Season Two (2013) — Author — 10 copies
Unicorn Western (2023) 10 copies
Yesterday's Gone: Season Six (2016) 10 copies, 1 review
Yesterday's Gone: Episode 7 (2012) 10 copies
Pull The Trigger (2011) — Author — 8 copies
WhiteSpace: Episode 4 (2012) 8 copies
WhiteSpace: Episode 5 (2012) 7 copies
Writing Online (2011) 7 copies
Dark Crossings Volume 2 (2012) 7 copies, 1 review
Namaste (2013) 7 copies, 1 review
Axis of Aaron (2014) 7 copies, 2 reviews
Future Proof (The Beam) (2023) 6 copies
12 (2015) 5 copies, 1 review
WhiteSpace: Season Two (2013) 5 copies
Namaste: Episode One (2013) 5 copies
Longshot 5 copies
The Infinite Loop (2013) 4 copies, 1 review
Jumper (2017) 4 copies
Fiction Unboxed (2014) 4 copies
Threshold (2014) 3 copies
The Hard Reset (2018) 3 copies, 1 review
Cascade Failure (2020) 3 copies, 1 review
Reboot (2020) 3 copies, 1 review
Dead Zero (2020) 3 copies
ForNevermore, Season One (2012) 3 copies
Deviant (2023) 2 copies
Dead Nation (2020) 2 copies
Dead Planet (2020) 2 copies
Z2136 (Z2134 Book 3) (2023) 2 copies
The Sleeper (2024) 2 copies
ForNevermore: Episode 5 (2012) 2 copies
ForNevermore: Episode 4 (2012) 2 copies
ForNevermore: Episode 3 (2012) 2 copies
ForNevermore: Episode 2 (2012) 2 copies
The Fall (2023) 2 copies
Available Darkness (2014) 2 copies
Homecoming (2023) 2 copies
The Collectors (2023) 2 copies
Cursed: The Full Saga (2017) 2 copies
Karma Police (2023) 2 copies
Writer Dad (2013) 1 copy
Chris Wakes Up (2011) 1 copy
The Watcher (2011) 1 copy
Serial Box (2012) 1 copy
Unicorn Western 2 (2013) 1 copy
Beauty and the Beast (2011) 1 copy
Devil May Care (2016) 1 copy
Penny to a Million (2011) 1 copy
Unicorn Western 3 (2013) 1 copy

Tagged

2013 (20) 3-considering-eown (13) aliens (19) Amazon (15) apocalypse (21) audiobook (13) currently-reading (12) dystopia (11) ebook (105) fantasy (11) fiction (73) have-on-shelf (28) horror (48) Kindle (107) kindle-books (11) own (12) owned (12) post-apocalyptic (66) read (24) read in 2018 (12) science fiction (120) series (31) sf (14) short story (10) thriller (15) to-read (444) unread (12) writing (15) Yesterday's Gone (13) yesterday-s-gone (12)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
20th Century
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Long Beach, California, USA
Places of residence
Austin, Texas, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

85 reviews
In this collection, the theme of "infinite" is interpreted varingly as cyclical, repetitive, annual or viral. Collectively, it was less than stellar, but individually some stories stood out far more than others.

"Zombie Run": A strong opener! It's like a combination of The Walking Dead and Edge of Tomorrow. The imagery is so vivid that you can feel the furious desperation of the MC, Freya.

"Echo": I'm not sure how this one got included because it's an outline instead of an actual story, i e. show more "She figures out where his office is and solicits his help." But "The Heirloom" definitely redeemed the author. Visceral generational trauma combined with terrifying, raw horror!

"Devil's Punchbowl": This one fell flat. John Abrams is a predatory land developer - a walking cliché - who predictably gets his comeuppance. "Judgement House" fared slightly better, but overall a distended story with cumbersome dialogue.

"The Kiddies": I LOVED the "monster" but was letdown by Kenzie's lack of dialogue. As one of only two characters it makes the ending far less impactful.

"Thirty Minutes": A tense what-would-you-do scenario with a Lovecraftian veneer. MC Leah appears genuine instead of self-righteous, and the ending is clever! "The Devil's Son," by the same author, was darker, but keeps the reader guessing much like the first!

"The Z.O.A." Hilarious, disgusting, graphic and absurd. It is tonally distinct from "Zombie Run" and a refreshing bit of ridiculousness halfway in!

"Underfoot/Crawlspace": The narration is bitter and unforgiving, and understandably so as the story unfolds. Unrelenting and keeps you on edge until the very end!

"No Retreat": Not long enough to flesh out Nathan and Mara's' toxic relationship, so it's an unwanted distraction from the calculated facade and dark secrets of "The Reverie" resort.

"Atlantis Blackout": Effectively uses the isolative setting of an oil rig to create a sense of entrapment as things spiral into chaos. A wild ride!
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Invasion by Sean Platt and Johnny Truant is the first entry in their series of books about aliens invading earth. Although in actuality, there is very little alien action in this volume. It most deals with the sighting of a space armada heading towards earth and the five days that it takes before they arrive. As the world’s population goes into panic mode, the story zeros in on one family and their survival tactics.

Meyer Dempsey has been preparing for a global apocalyptic event so he show more decides to immediately pile his wife and two kids, as well as his daughters boyfriend, into their well stocked van and head west to his house in Colorado that has a secret bunker where they can shelter in safety. He also advises his ex-wife, Heather, to also head there. The bulk of the book deals with the family trying to get from New York City to Vail, Colorado. This is much more than a regular road trip, they have to deal with over crowded roads, the difficulty of getting gas and supplies and, desperate people who want to take their possessions.

I am a huge fan of “survival” stories so this was a fun read for me. In view of our own current world situation, I was reassured at how relatively calm and controlled we have been during the pandemic compared to the crazy, out-of-control panic that fills this book. By the end of this volume, the aliens have arrived and have stationed a spaceship over every major city and have managed to destroy Moscow. The last chapter has Meyer quietly leaving his family in the bunker and heading outside where he is taken up by a smaller roving spacecraft. Of course, I have to read on in order to discover why he made this strange choice and what is going to happen next and although the books seem to revolve around this group of rather spoiled, entitled characters – I do intend to continue on. This book is definitely not for everyone but for me, it was a fun escape from reality.
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All the authors in this anthology were new to me except for Kim M. Watt and David Wright. There are twelves stories in the collection with Sean Platt, Kathryn Cottam and Ebony Graves contributing two stories each.

I thought six of the stories were very strong. Both of Sean Platt's stories were immediately immersive, delivering situations and ideas that pushed me to question things. Kim Watt's take on suburban zombies was funny. I enjoyed seeing her write without the constraints of producing show more a Cozy story. Sawyer Black's 'The Kiddies' gave the zombie apocalypse a gruesome twist that will stick with me for some time. B. K, Burns' 'Underfoot/Crawlspace' was an action-packed story of survival in the face of violence that has me rooting for Maddy, the teenage heroine. 'The Heirloom' by Kathryn Cottam was one of the scariest stories on witchcraft that I've come across.

Neither of Ebony Graves' stories worked for me. I didn't finish the second one. Her writing style turns me off. Kathryn Cottam's 'Echo' felt like an outline rather than a story.

The other four stories delivered solid entertainment.

I've commented on each story below in the order they occur in the anthology.

ZOMBIE RUN by Jason Krumbine

Wow, what a great story to open the anthology. Jason Krumbine packed a lot into a short story and it was all good: .vivid, tense, action-packed. It was a sort of Zombie Apocalypse meets Groundhog Day. The ending was strange and unexpected but I liked it. It left me hungry for more. Just because it's a short story doesn't mean everything has to be neatly explained before the end. I think I'll try out his 'Defiance' series.

ECHO by Kathryn Cottam

I liked the plot. It would make a great short story. It hasn't made a great short story yet because it reads more like an outline to get a publisher interested or a scenario pitch that may later become a script. It's all tell and no show. And the telling is as engaging as a PowerPoint presentation on how to write fiction. There's not a word of dialogue. I took a look at her novel 'Bluebeard's Bride' (2015). It looks fun. This made me wonder whether this story was some kind of experiment in form that I'm missing the point of..

THE DEVIL'S PUNCHBOWL by Ebony Graves

This one got a mention in the title of the anthology, so I was expecting it to be a centrepiece of the collection. It wasn't. The plot was pedestrian - entitled white man gets his comeuppance in the form of body horror for disrespecting a site made sacred when recently emancipated slaves were imprisoned there and left to starve. The main character was a caricature. The prose read like a high school essay. I'm surprised this got included in the collection. I'm amazed that it was called out in the title.

THE KIDDIES by Sawyer Black

I liked this. An original take on the zombie apocalypose. A sort of 'Gone' twist except not only have the adults gone but the toddlers are now killers. The description of a wave of mindless carnivore kiddies was both convincing and revolting. I liked the tight focus of the story as a personal journey. The ending was inspired. I'd like to read more by Sawyer Black. Even though I'm a Boomer, I've added his 'Zoomers vs Boomers' horror novel to my Wishlist.

THIRTY MINUTES by Sean Platt

This is a clever, well-executed "What would you do?" story with a strange man offering to change a beleaguered waitresses life subject to an unusual and disturbing condition She has thirty minutes to decide what to do. This was tense, kept me guessing and left me deeply satisfied both with how the story was told and the resolution that was reached.

THE Z.O.A. by Kim M. Watt

That was fun - bloody and tense but fun. I'm enjoy Kim Watt's books. I was curious to see what she'd write when she freed her imagination from the contratints of cosy stories. I love the result. The humour is still there. The intimidatingly ruthless old ladies are still in charge but there's a little more chaos and a lot more blood. This is one of most ejoyable zombie stories I've read.

THE DEVIL'S SON by Sean Platt

From the beginning, it's clear that something is badly wrong here. Something evil. But what? And what can or should be done about it. The answer depends on what you believe and the consequences depend on whether what you believe is true. This was tense and stimulating and I'm still in two minds about whether I have the right answer. I love that.

THE HEIRLOOM by Kathryn Cottam

Wow! That was a ride. It was dark and violent. There was child abuse, self-harm, and immolation and yet it remained a story about two sisters helping each other to survive. The supernatural element was a scary twist on a new idea. I loved that the story deviated from the "They're doomed and nothing can help them!" trope that often makes me feel like I'm doing something creepy, like watching a dog fight, and gave me something just as scary but a little more hopeful.

Kathryn Cottam's first story in this collection didn't work for me. This one makes me want to read her back catalogue.

JUDGEMENT HOUSE by Ebony Graves

I didn't make it very far into this one. The writing style doesn't work for me. The language is clunky and overworked.

UNDERFOOT/CRAWLSPACE by B. K. Burns

An intense story told with skill. Violent and bloody but not in an exploitative way. It's the night before Maddie's eighteenth birthday when she'll finally legally be an adult who can sign a lease, hold a job and take custody of her little brother. Maddie has a plan to escape from her abusive uncle. It's a good plan but it didn't anticipate the arrival of violent men looking for something her uncle took from them. What follows is a tense, desperate struggle for survival that had my full attention. I love how this was written:: vivid, tense and personal.

NO RETREAT by Percival Constantine

That was original and strange. I liked the suspense. The ending was a little abrupt and not entirely convincing but the idea is a good one.

ATLANTIS BLACKOUT by David W. Wright

That was intense. Action almost from the beginning. Great setting on a semi-submersible rig in the Gulf of Mexico. The situation is a sort of 'Into The Drowning Deep' meets 'Alien' but with an overlay of an abusive relationship that makes the story personal and adds even more tension.
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½
This book was so freaking good! I thought that I would have trouble bouncing between different characters on each chapter but they are all so unique and memorable I had no issues at all. I cannot wait for the next part of the series! This is a great twist on the end of days theme with aliens? Maybe? Bad guys, good guys, spiritual guides that come in the form of a dog. People who can see auras...I loved it!

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Statistics

Works
145
Members
1,969
Popularity
#13,056
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
80
ISBNs
104
Languages
2
Favorited
3

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