
Robert Gleason
Author of Wrath of God
Works by Robert Gleason
The Nuclear Terrorist: His Financial Backers and Political Patrons in the US and Abroad (2014) 8 copies
END OF DAYS 1 copy
Contemporary Spirituality 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Gleason, Robert
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
End of Days
Robert Gleason
Forge Books
2011
Trade Paperback
Advance Reader’s Copy
496 pages
End of Days by Robert Gleason had all the potential of becoming a very good post-apocalyptic glimpse into a future gone terribly wrong. It contains political intrigue, fairly interesting characters, a good premise, and an excellent explanation of a world on the brink of nuclear destruction. But it suddenly took a turn for the worse when a pair of philosophical-minded rats unexpectedly entered the show more narrative. They were so out of place in the flow of the story, in fact, that I thought perhaps a portion of another novel had somehow been accidently edited into this one by the publisher. I gave the author the benefit of the doubt and read on but it only got worse and then the story (and the writing) bogged down to a slow crawl and I admit that I was unable to finish the book. I’m still trying to figure out what purpose the rats played in the story and I’m sure Gleason somehow pulled it all together in the end but I really didn’t feel there was a need for the animal-based fantasy to be included in the story. It just didn’t make any sense.
Life is too short to put this one at the top of your reading list. In my opinion, End of Days is pretty much a waste of good reading time. There are plenty of other solid post-apocalyptic stories out there that are much more worthwhile. Scroll down through some of my other reviews and you’ll see what I mean.
2 ½ stars out of 5
The Alternative
Southeast Wisconsin show less
Robert Gleason
Forge Books
2011
Trade Paperback
Advance Reader’s Copy
496 pages
End of Days by Robert Gleason had all the potential of becoming a very good post-apocalyptic glimpse into a future gone terribly wrong. It contains political intrigue, fairly interesting characters, a good premise, and an excellent explanation of a world on the brink of nuclear destruction. But it suddenly took a turn for the worse when a pair of philosophical-minded rats unexpectedly entered the show more narrative. They were so out of place in the flow of the story, in fact, that I thought perhaps a portion of another novel had somehow been accidently edited into this one by the publisher. I gave the author the benefit of the doubt and read on but it only got worse and then the story (and the writing) bogged down to a slow crawl and I admit that I was unable to finish the book. I’m still trying to figure out what purpose the rats played in the story and I’m sure Gleason somehow pulled it all together in the end but I really didn’t feel there was a need for the animal-based fantasy to be included in the story. It just didn’t make any sense.
Life is too short to put this one at the top of your reading list. In my opinion, End of Days is pretty much a waste of good reading time. There are plenty of other solid post-apocalyptic stories out there that are much more worthwhile. Scroll down through some of my other reviews and you’ll see what I mean.
2 ½ stars out of 5
The Alternative
Southeast Wisconsin show less
When you google Robert Gleason, the first hits are a serial killer. That's not this Robert Gleason. This Robert Gleason only kills your fun of reading.
Got it second-hand for a buck or two and it's not worth that much.
Sure, the woke brigade over at Tor will have loved it and Scalzi will have clapped more than his hands over this piece of garbage.
It's so hamfisted and obvious in its shitty rhetoric, its imagery. Message fuction at its worst. I did not finish this book, in fact I barely got show more started before disgustedly throwing it in the trash where it belongs. show less
Got it second-hand for a buck or two and it's not worth that much.
Sure, the woke brigade over at Tor will have loved it and Scalzi will have clapped more than his hands over this piece of garbage.
It's so hamfisted and obvious in its shitty rhetoric, its imagery. Message fuction at its worst. I did not finish this book, in fact I barely got show more started before disgustedly throwing it in the trash where it belongs. show less
Pretty standard thriller. Unbelievably beautiful, sexy women no man can resist. Nuclear Power is evil. And building nuclear power plants is a huge mistake.
Hasad quotes Shakespeare regarding the lesson 'as ye sow, so shall ye reap' overlooking the fact that Shakespeare was quoting the Bible.
Hasad quotes Shakespeare regarding the lesson 'as ye sow, so shall ye reap' overlooking the fact that Shakespeare was quoting the Bible.
This is a terrible book. Terribly written and full of xenophobic/stereotyped imagery. I did not get past 1/4 of the way through it because it is just so... bad. In fact, instead of donating it, like I typically do with books I am done with, I chucked it into the paper recycle bin so nobody else would be subjected to this drivel.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Also by
- 4
- Members
- 166
- Popularity
- #127,844
- Rating
- 2.8
- Reviews
- 8
- ISBNs
- 16



