I first read the After the Plague novels as they each came out, and I've reviewed them individually. But now that the first three are available in this beautiful package I want to let more readers know how fantastic this series is. If I could have one wish it would be to read Imogen’s books again for the first time; that’s how amazing she makes you feel with her writing. I'll briefly review each book again here so you don't have to search for my originals. The series is told in alternating points of view by Frankie, the female protagonist, and Yorke, the male hero. A little background: The setting is the near future, with a huge conflict in the form of a mutated flu that's killed billions. The odds of survival are rare, though some random people seem immune. Frankie is a painter, married to the love of her life, Jimmy. He takes care of her, both emótionally and physically. He's also 13 years her senior. Yorke, the other POV character, is basically Frankie’s opposite. He’s a special forces soldier who fought in WWIII, which apparently was awful. He has no real frīends or family. He calls himself a rock. He does have a junkie younger brother he barely knows, and his only real goal besides surviving is to find him.
BROKEN
Washington, DC, where Frankie and Jimmy live, has gotten progressively worse in days. Food deliveries stopped. Jimmy wants to leave for his father's farmhouse outside of town. Around the same time, Yorke returned from Germany and surveils the streets. He sees Jimmy and Frankie for the first time, and something about her stays with him (mostly her ass, but he's a guy who thinks he could die, so whatever). They don't meet. Nor do Jimmy and Frankie make it past the guards. They vow to try again, but Jimmy gets sick.
You can guess what happens from there. Yes, this is a romance. And yes, Jimmy is a wonderful man who doesn't deserve to die. But he has to. And you always know he will. That's what's so tragic and beautiful about the following books. In this one, I was bawling along with Frankie as she buried him and didn't know how she'd move forward. She mourns, and this scream is pulled from her like her soul is ripping apart. Yorke, in some dead guy's house, drunk and thinking he might end things, hears it. And knows it's her. A dog hears her too and rather than letting her lay down and die, his nudge gets her up to return him to his owners. Where she finds a little boy named Auden. And I won't spoil the plot from there.
LOST
In this second book, we see Frankie choose life and hope and love for this little boy who has lost at least as much as she has. She gets him away from the city and cares for him. In her mind, she has zero survival skills for the apocalypse. But as a reader, you can tell, even from Broken, that she's tougher than she gives herself credit for. And she has a natural joy for life that is breaking through, even while she's grieving. But when she gets hurt she realizes Auden needs more than just her, and they venture into the city looking for survivors she'd seen before the TV went out. This is where she meets Yorke, who hasn't forgotten her, and he saves both her and Auden from another group that's hoarding guns and grabbing kids. Yorke is trained in all types of survival. He's not only huge and physically intimidating, but he's also a total alpha male. Talk about an officer and a gentleman... He knows what Frankie's been through with her husband dying and he doesn't try to push her. Frankie knows he wants her though. She wants him too. Even Auden picks up on it. He's so understanding and patient. He knows there's room in her heart for him and Jimmy. It's impossible, girls, not to fall in love with Yorke in this book. If I had to go through the apocalypse, please write him in by my side.
They fall into a routine, where Yorke is clearing the bridges every day so they can leave the city; and Frankie and Auden scavenge the nearby houses. Until one day she comes out of one to find Auden gone. He always waits for her to ensure there are no dead people inside before they both go in. She streams for him, gets hit and taken. I won't give spoilers about what happens in the house, but a tweaker had grabbed Auden and then her, and she's beat visibly. Yorke panics when he realizes they're gone, but of course with his skills finds them, busts in, rescues his people, and kills the would-be rapist. There's a lot more going on in this book. It's a lot longer than Broken, and the next book is even more intense. Imogen’s wordsmithing will have you highlighting passages and going back to read how beautiful they are. There's conflict layered upon conflict. The sexual tension building between Yorke and Frankie is so intense I'm surprised my e-reader didn't combust. And of course the backdrop is the apocalypse. But there's joy too. I flat-out laughed when Frankie breaks into a mall, I think, and loots pricey (but worth it, trust me) La Mer face cream bottles. Thousands of dollars worth. I wrote the author and asked her to please not kill the La Mer. That's totally something I would loot if the world was ending. That's when you know Frankie still seeks joy.
FOUND
In the final novel in this series, Frankie feełs helpless because she has to use a crutch after her attack. Auden isn't speaking; he's traumatized. Yorke is acting weird and will barely look at her face. Once Frankie sees it in a mirror, she understands. She thinks he might be mad he had to kill someone for her, but that's not it. He doesn't want her to know that he shares the same gene pool as her attacker. He didn't hesitate to kill him, even when he recognized the man as his little brother. And now he's dealing with how he failed him in life. He tried to reconnect when he got home, but his brother wanted nothing to do with him. And now that kid he abandoned turned into the man who did what he did to the woman he loves. He carries these things alone. Since Frankie can't get Auden to talk she gets Yorke, who's barely talking, to take them to a library for books on child psychology, growing food, romance novels, comic books, and anything else that looks appealing. Later they meet another group and after some tension, agree to join together. Yorke and Frankie are trying to reconnect with the group they'd lost the night they met, and one of these women knows how to get where they are staying.
In this part, Frankie has other women to talk to about her feelings for Yorke. These women were married too, and when she says that she was really in love wīth her husband and ends up crying every time Yorke touches her, they understand because they've been there. One who is sleeping with a younger man in the group explains she still cries every time, and sometimes he does too. When Frankie gets drunk and tries to have sex with Yorke, he won't. But when they kiss, it's just as hot.
The group finds a place to go, which is where they'll settle when the next set of books comes out, starting with Safe in mid-December.
I can't recommend this series highly enough. I read each on Kindle Unlimited, then bought them so I would always have a copy to reread and to support the author. The first book, Broken, is available on Audible and is narrated by the author and William Trevino. It's beautiful. The rest are coming soon.
I received an Advanced Readers Copy in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own.