Broken: Book 3
Secrets in the Deadlands are written in radiation and blood. Keesa will uncover them all…
In the radioactive Deadlands of the Southeastern United States, Keesa leads a scouting party in search of resources and food supplies, while trying to find clues to contact the Resistance. Along the way, she leaves notes for her missing friend Zidia in hopes of salvaging her remaining humanity. After intercepting intelligence about a new, dangerous Establishment weapon, Keesa uncovers haunting revelations about her past – including dark truths about her parents’ fate and her father’s role in the world’s devastation. Keesa discovers she’s an “Alpha” with ESP abilities, making her a target for the Establishment. When her team is captured by CRIB, a sinister research facility deep in the heart of the forest, salvation comes from an unexpected ally. But a mysterious Bounty Hunter lurking in the shadows soon strikes at Keesa’s heart, forcing a confrontation she may not survive.
The third installment of The Young Hellions Series plunges readers deeper into a world of mutated threats, betrayal, and buried truths, where survival means facing not just the horrors of the Badlands, but the darkness within.
EARLY PRAISE FOR THE BROKEN SERIES:
Author Braxton Cosby has created a vivid world filled with war, destruction, and hopelessness. I found it hard to put this book down. I was immersed in Keesa’s world and mind, and I was rooting for her to escape with her brother and best friend. Keesa’s character perfectly portrays a teenager who is in a tough situation. It’s filled with different emotions that she is trying to understand. Braxton expertly portrays the character’s emotions in his story, and all of the characters are unique in their own way. Keesa and Wynn’s friendship is one that I enjoyed reading about throughout the book. I enjoyed that the author spent more time developing the characters rather than spending time explaining every detail, and I felt this brought life to the story. The reader gets a perfect balance of showing rather than telling.