Kim Deister
Written on Aug 14, 2011
"Dropping a cat from the top ledge of a ten-story office building was not the best way to remain hidden, but it was necessary."
Not your everyday start to a novel and it had me wanting more. After a missile attack on the city, a group survivors have lived in the well-prepared fallout shelter of a genetic research center, not leaving it for three years. When they finally do emerge, the world as they know it is gone. Being in the streets for even a moment is a dangerous mission that many do not survive. The survivors have organized themselves into a new society, with new rules and regulations to try to save the human race from extinction. Only a very few are allowed to leave the building and face the breed of shape-shifting killers that now roam the streets.
The sheer terror the author created in the dystopian Pittsburgh of 2073 was absolutely chilling. From the fog, mist, and darkness of the streets to the red eyes and growls of the shifters prowling,... the environment was eerie, creepy, and downright scary. The descriptions were well done, more than capable of creating the physical scene without overloading the story with endless imagery. The characters, too, were extremely well done. All of them were entirely believeable, even if not all of them were truly likeable. There was definately some aspects to the story that could seem, on the surface, as a bit misogynistic, including some questionable sexy scenes. But, in my opinion, that really wasn't the case. Society within the research center had been reformed at it's most primitive level and women, right or wrong, were needed to assure the continuation of humanity and were therefore far more protected. It was more of a necessary aspect to the survival of human beings than a sexist thing.
This was a story that grabbed me and held on to me. It was deliciously scary and, as in the best of dystopian fiction, it was entirely believable as a possibility. I highly recommend picking this up. The following two, in order, are Beyond the Darkness and The Game of Pawns, both available now.