Review: Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre
Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre by Max Brooks
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I was provided an eARC of this title by the publisher, Del Rey, through NetGalley.
This was freakin' brilliant!
I've read Max before, so I did come in familiar with his style of fictional non-fiction. That is, the story is told through a series of journal entries and interviews. This style adds quite a bit of realism to a tale that's otherwise rather difficult to believe.
Or is it? Brooks backs up his narrative with science and a study of human behavior. It's a cautionary tale, to be sure, but frightening in illustrating just how close our society is to total collapse. It doesn't take much to send an area of citizens into complete chaos, stripping them of their modern day comforts. Brooks shows how fast people will devolve, and actually adapt, to these severe changes...
In today's world, this novel shows us another side of what "could" happen. Maybe not this exact plot, but between natural disasters, unpredictable disease, and social unrest we could be teetering on the edge.
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I was provided an eARC of this title by the publisher, Del Rey, through NetGalley.
This was freakin' brilliant!
I've read Max before, so I did come in familiar with his style of fictional non-fiction. That is, the story is told through a series of journal entries and interviews. This style adds quite a bit of realism to a tale that's otherwise rather difficult to believe.
Or is it? Brooks backs up his narrative with science and a study of human behavior. It's a cautionary tale, to be sure, but frightening in illustrating just how close our society is to total collapse. It doesn't take much to send an area of citizens into complete chaos, stripping them of their modern day comforts. Brooks shows how fast people will devolve, and actually adapt, to these severe changes...
In today's world, this novel shows us another side of what "could" happen. Maybe not this exact plot, but between natural disasters, unpredictable disease, and social unrest we could be teetering on the edge.
View all my reviews
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