J.K. Franks

J.K. Franks’s Followers (206)

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Douglas...
45 books | 255 friends

Raymond...
548 books | 32 friends

R. Rhodes
16 books | 26 friends

Norther...
2,737 books | 820 friends


J.K. Franks

Goodreads Author


Born
Raleigh, The United States
Website

Twitter

Genre

Influences
Heinlein, Clarke, Asimov, Bradbury

Member Since
June 2016


Admitted tech geek, entrepreneur, cyclist and inveterate storyteller, JK Franks’ world was formed by a childhood spent in the rural South growing up during the Space Age. This is when he developed a love for writing. He also became an avid student of history and science, and a regular reader of reference books and biographies. Once he discovered science fiction he never looked back.

His protagonists are human: not superheroes, just normal people with the same problems as everyone else, but who rise to challenges when they come along. The Catalyst series combines his passion for hard science fiction with his outlook on self-reliance.

Franks and his wife now live in West Point, Georgia. He is currently working on this next book. No matter whe
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Popular Answered Questions

J.K. Franks I like my books to be grounded in reality so most of my inspiration originates in the world of science. From there, I start asking myself, 'what if...…moreI like my books to be grounded in reality so most of my inspiration originates in the world of science. From there, I start asking myself, 'what if...'(less)
J.K. Franks I have not yet encountered this problem. My stories, characters and scenes seem to flow once I begin the writing process. I do occasionally have to st…moreI have not yet encountered this problem. My stories, characters and scenes seem to flow once I begin the writing process. I do occasionally have to step back particularly in very emotional scenes to make sure the feeling are genuine and coming across as authentic. To do that I try to immerse myself into the characters and in doing so the path forward is normally obvious.(less)
Average rating: 4.42 · 6,868 ratings · 462 reviews · 22 distinct worksSimilar authors
Downward Cycle (Catalyst #1)

4.28 avg rating — 2,595 ratings — published 2016 — 10 editions
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Kingdoms of Sorrow (Catalys...

4.50 avg rating — 1,367 ratings6 editions
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Ghost Country (Catalyst #4)

4.55 avg rating — 1,186 ratings7 editions
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American Exodus

4.54 avg rating — 1,135 ratings6 editions
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State of Chaos (Cade Rearde...

4.44 avg rating — 179 ratings
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Savage Earth I : Nightmare ...

4.39 avg rating — 138 ratings
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Midnight Zone

4.51 avg rating — 82 ratings3 editions
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Savage Earth 2 : Eradicatio...

4.35 avg rating — 71 ratings3 editions
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Savage Earth 3 : Wastelands...

4.24 avg rating — 49 ratings3 editions
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The Night Gate

4.18 avg rating — 39 ratings4 editions
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More books by J.K. Franks…
Downward Cycle Kingdoms of Sorrow American Exodus Ghost Country
(4 books)
by
4.43 avg rating — 6,281 ratings

State of Chaos
(1 book)
by
4.44 avg rating — 179 ratings

Quotes by J.K. Franks  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“I’m not condemning anyone’s personal beliefs. I honestly don’t care if they worship Jesus, Buddha, Allah or the Tooth Fairy. But if that faith tells them to do harm to others, I have a big fucking issue with it. Millions, hell, probably billions of people throughout history have been killed in the name of one religion or the other. Just because you put your particular brand of God on it or drop enough Bible verses into your hate-filled rants to convince people, doesn’t make your actions any more justified.”
J.K. Franks, Kingdoms of Sorrow

“nation for a large-scale crisis. We have handed over responsibility to our government to provide for us in emergencies, yet we have seen how poorly it functions in that role. Often politicians and bureaucracy seem better suited to creating problems than solving”
J.K. Franks, Downward Cycle

“Not just the Gulf Stream, nearly all of the ocean currents are slowing. The Gulf Stream will likely be the worst. It is already at a 1600 year low, and our projections are it will come to a stop in the next fifteen years.”
J.K. Franks, Ghost Country

Polls

324896
What books would you like to read and discuss in the fall and winter? Some really interesting options this time!
PLEASE ONLY VOTE IF YOU WILL RETURN TO DISCUSS (Seriously, think about this - we get too many people who vote but don't discuss, which is unfair to those who participate.) Thanks, and happy voting!

Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman
2020, 446 pages, 4.53 stars
$4.99 Kindle, used starting at $18.69, at some libraries


"The apocalypse will be televised!

A man. His ex-girlfriend's cat. A sadistic game show unlike anything in the universe: a dungeon crawl where survival depends on killing your prey in the most entertaining way possible.

In a flash, every human-erected construction on Earth—from Buckingham Palace to the tiniest of sheds—collapses in a heap, sinking into the ground.

The buildings and all the people inside have all been atomized and transformed into the dungeon: an 18-level labyrinth filled with traps, monsters, and loot. A dungeon so enormous, it circles the entire globe.

Only a few dare venture inside. But once you're in, you can't get out. And what's worse, each level has a time limit. You have but days to find a staircase to the next level down, or it's game over. In this game, it's not about your strength or your dexterity. It's about your followers, your views. Your clout. It's about building an audience and killing those goblins with style.

You can't just survive here. You gotta survive big.

You gotta fight with vigor, with excitement. You gotta make them stand up and cheer. And if you do have that "it" factor, you may just find yourself with a following. That's the only way to truly survive in this game—with the help of the loot boxes dropped upon you by the generous benefactors watching from across the galaxy.

They call it Dungeon Crawler World. But for Carl, it's anything but a game."
 
  17 votes, 28.3%

Fever 1793 by Laurie Halse Anderson
2000, 225 pages, 3.93 stars
$8.99 Kindle, print starts at $7.59, also at library



"It's late summer 1793, and the streets of Philadelphia are abuzz with mosquitoes and rumors of fever. Down near the docks, many have taken ill, and the fatalities are mounting. Now they include Polly, the serving girl at the Cook Coffeehouse. But fourteen-year-old Mattie Cook doesn't get a moment to mourn the passing of her childhood playmate. New customers have overrun her family's coffee shop, located far from the mosquito-infested river, and Mattie's concerns of fever are all but overshadowed by dreams of growing her family's small business into a thriving enterprise. But when the fever begins to strike closer to home, Mattie's struggle to build a new life must give way to a new fight—the fight to stay alive."
 
  13 votes, 21.7%

The Book Censor's Library by Bothayna Al-Essa
2019, 263 pages, 3.85 stars
$9.99 Kindle, print starts at $13.01, likely also at library



"A perilous and fantastical satire of banned books, secret libraries, and the looming eye of an all-powerful government.

The new book censor hasn’t slept soundly in weeks. By day he combs through manuscripts at a government office, looking for anything that would make a book unfit to publish―allusions to queerness, unapproved religions, any mention of life before the Revolution. By night the characters of literary classics crowd his dreams, and pilfered novels pile up in the house he shares with his wife and daughter. As the siren song of forbidden reading continues to beckon, he descends into a netherworld of resistance fighters, undercover booksellers, and outlaw librarians trying to save their history and culture.

Reckoning with the global threat to free speech and the bleak future it all but guarantees, Bothayna Al-Essa marries the steely dystopia of Orwell’s 1984 with the madcap absurdity of Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, resulting in a dreadful twist worthy of Kafka. The Book Censor’s Library is a warning call and a love letter to stories and the delicious act of losing oneself in them."
 
  12 votes, 20.0%

Tucker vs. the Apocalypse (novella)
Free on Amazon right now: https://a.co/d/c62qIyX
2023, 219 pages, 4.14 stars
Kindle 0.00 right now, $6.99 paperback

"Lost and alone amid the ashes of a dead civilization

Household pet Tucker is thrust into an apocalyptic world when not only his own ‘master’, but all of humanity, are stricken with a deadly plague. The disease is fatal in almost one hundred percent of cases, but affects only humans, leaving empty cities and towns that are quickly being repopulated with domestic animals and wildlife.

Tucker eventually connects with a group of other former pets. Deprived of their human caretakers, and guided by the mysterious Web of Life, Tucker and his ‘pack’ must learn to fend for themselves, confronting cold and blinding snow, blistering heat, the threat of starvation, ferocious predators, and the violent remnants of humanity as they search for a new home."
 
  10 votes, 16.7%

Downward Cycle by J.K. Franks
2016, 349 pages, 4.28 stars
$5.99 Kindle, print starts at $8.52, at some libraries



"Who will survive the darkness? Life in a remote oceanfront town begins to spiral downward after a massive solar flare causes a global blackout. As planes fall from the sky, cars suddenly die, and most electrical devices stop working with catastrophic consequences. But the loss of electrical power is just the first of the problems facing the survivors. In the chaos, that follows. An ordinary man helplessly watches the world around him begin to breakdown. While the thin veneer of normalcy stubbornly shrouds the coming collapse. Scott Montgomery discovers the truth; not just about the extent of damage to the world's infrastructure but also the drastic plans one shadowy group has for regaining control.

A shockingly realistic look at how society copes when the world is thrust back to a time before electricity. It is brutal, deadly and largely fact-based storytelling. Scott and his new friends battle to save their town and themselves. They cannot avoid the steadily growing number of people who have realized that they can get away with whatever they want in a world where there are no longer any legal consequences for their actions. Adding to the problems is an elite para-military organization pursuing a draconian plan to ensure their vision for the new world with deadly consequences."
 
  8 votes, 13.3%

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