The Blurb
“God is a slick god. Temple knows. She knows because of all the crackerjack miracles still to be seen on this ruined globe…
Older than her years and completely alone, Temple is just trying to live one day at a time in a post-apocalyptic world, where the undead roam endlessly, and the remnant of mankind who have survived, at times, seem to retain little humanity themselves.
This is the world she was born into. Temple has known nothing else. Her journey takes her to far-flung places, to people struggling to maintain some semblance of civilization – and to those who have created a new world order for themselves.
When she comes across the helpless Maury, she attempts to set one thing right, if she can just get him back to his family in Texas then maybe it will bring redemption for some of the terrible things she’s done in her past. Because Temple has had to fight to survive, has done things that she’s not proud of and, along the road, she’s made enemies.
Now one vengeful man is determined that, in a world gone mad, killing her is the one thing that makes sense…”
(source: Amazon.com)
What I thought
This isn’t normally the sort of book that I would pick up. Although, in recent years, I have read and really enjoyed a number of post-apocolyptic novels, I was initially somewhat put off this book by the promise of zombies. Then I read that I it had elements of McCarthys The Road (which I LOVED!) and Matheson’s I am Legend (which I expected to hate when given it to read for a bookclub, but actually really enjoyed).
The book started really well. Temple is 16, alone and kick-ass. She has spent the last few weeks on an island off the Florida coast catching and eating fish and spending her days looking out over the water to make sure she remains alone. Life as we know it is hinted at with details like Temple finding a stash of magazines (from before) which have glossy pictures of a life she has never known. The only thing that upsets Temple’s solitary existance is coming across a body on the beach. The body, as she suspected, is one of the undead (or Slugs as she calls them): it looks like the Slug has got wind of her on the island and tried to swim over but been dashed on the rocks and left for dead. Temple knows that it’s only a matter of time before more follow and she picks up her handful of belongings and makes her way back to the mainland to set off north and on to the next place.
The world that Temple inhabits is a mixture of humans (some nomads and some who have set up communities in the wake of whatever happened) and zombies who roam the the land looking for flesh to feed on. Temple encounters several people along the way: some who help her and some who are after her. Temple does whatever she has to to survive, and boy does she. She has never known a different world and it is clear early on that her parents weren’t around for very long so she has had to cope for herself all her life. There are scenes of violence as Temple is ruthless in her desire to stay alive, but this isn’t just a book about destruction and desolation; it’s also about human emotion. Temple picks up a mute man along the way (whom she calls “Dummy”) and despite her thinking that she can cast him off onto someone else, she becomes strangely attached and realises that she does have it in her to help and be kind (which is something unfamiliar to her).
The narrative in this book is clean and uncluttered and exactly what I loved about The Road. I think it will and can be enjoyed by those who love fantasy type fiction, but also those (like me) for whom this isn’t their normal genre. There was only one part that bothered me, and that was in the middle when Temple meets a group of people called “The Inheritors of the Earth”: I just didn’t get wht they were in it; it seemed unecessary to me and made what seemed a plausible storyline (even with the zombies which I could accept) into something that instantly made me snap back to reality and disbelieve again.
In summary, I enjoyed this book and would recommend to anyone who likes post-apocolyptic novels and fantasy.
(I reveived my copy of this book from Amazon Vine)
Have you read any post-apocolyptic books? What do you think of them?
This book is 1/4 in the RIP V Challenge
















I’m a great lover of dystopian fiction, but I hadn’t heard of this book yet. I’m a bit unsure about zombies too, but I guess if you consider them “the bad ones” then it doesn’t matter what form they come into, men with guns, coyotes or zombies.
Is it a YA book, though? I prefer adult dystopian novels but I do read YA too.
I’m not sure if it’s classed as YA, Judith: I don’t think it is but I could be wrong.
I agree with your review almost 100%! Except I thought the ending played out differently than it should have, mostly because of those Inheritors of the Earth that you mentioned. Which in the end made me dislike it quite a bit. But I really, really enjoyed the first three-quarters or so. @leeswammes It’s definitely not YA.
Oh phew, I’m glad it’s not just me that thought the Inheritors of the Earth spoiled it. Other than that it was a great book.
I was meant to be getting a copy of this in the post but nothing has ever come through so maybe it got lost in the post, sounds interesting though and I think its meant to be crossover, sort of.
I am still haunted by The Children of the Dust which was a book about nuclear war and the affect effects of an ‘apocolypse’ that we studied in school and absolutely petrified me. I think I might have to try it again as an adult.
I haven’t heard of The Children of Dust, Simon, but I may have to chekc it out.
I have never heard of this book. It sounds interesting, though!
It’s brand new out, Kailana. Hope you enjoy if you read
I received the book from the publisher or I would not have picked it up for the same reasons you did. I love post apocalyptic books, but did not like this one. None of it rang true for me and the ending..well let’s just say it confirmed that I had wasted an afternoon.
I can totally relate to that. I enjoyed it until about half way through but then it got a bit silly.
I’ve read too many post-apocalyptic novels to list, but the most recent was The Road which I thought was excellent for this genre. I’ve got The Postman by David Brin sitting on my stack waiting to be read. Probably my all time favorite is A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr.
I haven’t heard of The Postman – I must look that up. I have heard of Canticle and heard good things so maybe that should go on Mt.TBR