Savage Survival Review
Savage
Survival review by Harriet Klausner
The aliens came and conquered the Earth without much resistance. Many humans
died in the first wave; other became guinea pigs for horrific survival testing
though none of the earthlings know why. That is the pandemic big scale impact.
However, there are little stories also that roll up into the globalization
nightmare like that of eleven year old Lyda Brightner. Her beloved father Bruce
is dead; her equally overprotective mom Elaine is gone and assumed either dead
or about to be dead. Lyda is hurt badly, but awakens in a camp with no
protector. Someone named Boris sells her for a brick and water to Big Bill. He
mistreats her and sells her to a slave owner. Lyda escapes and meets Ginella
Sparks who is hiding with her baby having escaped from the “spiders”. Lyda vows
to never be abused again as she finds an inner strength to protect herself and
those who soon depend on her for leadership. As she and the others adapt to a
rough terrain and the alien tests they grow stronger mentally and physically.
They each wonder what the spiders have in mind for the dwindling survivors.
Readers will enjoy SAVAGE SURVIVAL, a wonderful “Darwinian” science fiction
tale that questions what human strength truly is. Lyda is a terrific lead
individual who mentally grows stronger with each horrific adventure as she
adapts to whatever is thrown at her; she truly comes a long way from the
overly-protected suburban tweener to a powerful ethical leader. Darrell Bain
provides a coming of age saga of a pampered loved preadolescent becoming a
strong independent woman.
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