The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse by Brandon Applegate


The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse
Title : The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
ISBN-10 : 9798986920245
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 300
Publication : First published July 13, 2023

This is not a book about the apocalypse.

In these pages, you won't find the hero. You won't find the ticking clock. You will not be in the room when they press the big red button. Instead, you'll find new life in the face of certain death, a boy whose prayers are answered in the worst way, mothers and sisters and friends who just want another second with their loved ones, and those who just want a moment to themselves.

These are the stories from the ground. The experiences of those who saw the world come to its violent conclusion, and what really mattered at the end of all things.

Featuring original fiction by

Taryn Martinez, Carson Winter, D. Matthew Urban, Sara Tantlinger, Alex Fox, Tiffany Michelle Brown, Angela Sylvaine, M. Lopes da Silva, Andrew Cull, Ruth Anna Evans, Wendy N. Wagner, Gwendolyn Kiste, Olen Crowe, Brittany Johnston, Elou Carroll, Nick Bouchard, L. Marie Wood, W. Dale Jordan, Elford Alley, Chris Mason, Matthew M. Bartlett, Madison McSweeney, Rae Knowles, RJ Joseph, Emma E. Murray, V. Castro, Eoin Murphy, and J.A.W. McCarthy


The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse Reviews


  •  Bon

    Happiest of release days!

    Thanks to Hungry Shadow Press and Brandon Applegate for a copy to review! The apocalypse begins on July 13th.

    This is a great collection, unique in its unifying theme of centering people and human emotion amid the beginning of the end; less focus on the carnage, fire and destruction, and more on who is experiencing it. It's always tough to review an anthology, but I'll do my best to highlight some standouts, as usual.


    One of my favorite stories was Madison McSweeney's "I Am The Vanity Mirror Shaped Like A Skull", presenting a zombie apocalypse with some very cool hive mind lore. This story presents a world-ending pandemic through the lens of nightmarish bureaucracy, criminalizing those who catch the plague. It felt timely, perhaps even prescient.

    Emma E. Murray's "The Smell of Summer", narrated by a dog living through a human apocalypse, hit me in the feels, hard. Really a one of a kind story.

    If you enjoy The Last of Us, Alex Fox's "The Hunt" has very similar vibes, with a father and daughter seeking safety from interstellar invaders.

    I also really loved "A Sweet Soiree On The Last Night of the World", by Gwendolyn Kiste, because a party in the graveyard sounds like a fantastically goth way to go.

    Many of these stories take place before the missiles hit, the asteroid lands, or the sickness spreads, and showcase the range of reactions you know humanity would have to the end of the world. People flee, people make love for the last time, people splurge on a last meal. And the roster of contributors here is truly impressive.

    Evocative, lyrical writing isn't the first thing that comes to mind when reading about the end of the world, but this collection is full of beautifully written, emotionally wrenching stories of doomed people.

  • Stitching Ghost

    Do you enjoy stories that do not end well for anyone involved? Do you want to inflict emotional pain and small existential crises on yourself? Yes? Excellent, read this collection.

    In this book you will find a collection of well written and engaging stories that confront mortality with different scenarios and protagonists (not all of them human), this is all about the end on the most personal level and it is brilliantly executed. It made me think of the movie Melancholia where the apocalypse is a background character to the characters inner lives and to how they face their own finality, it's emotionally heavy and there's a lot of potentially triggering material (do check the trigger warnings). There were a few stories I would have wanted more from but that's just me being greedy for a good story. While I had my favorites, I can honestly say that every entry in this collection was strong, and it took me a day or two to process before I could review.

    There's a wide array of apocalypses and the characters are about as diverse as you can hope for which kept the collection from getting stale. Applegate really has a knack for putting together anthologies that keep their topic fresh.

    I received an eARC of this book through Booksirens and this is my honest review.

  • Suz Jay

    “After 9/11, we’d all tried to get back to normal, but what we’d known as normal before that September day was gone for good. Normal now was waiting. Waiting for the next bomb, the next mass shooting, the next virus. 9/11 had long, skeletal fingers that could easily reach through twenty years to wrap themselves around your heart.”—except from Brandon Applegate’s Forward.

    I enjoyed the way each author tackled the apocalypse theme. Readers are sure to connect with these stories and the way the characters deal with their brief, bleak futures.

    My favorite pieces in the anthology are: Brandon Applegate’s Forward,
    “The Viridescent Dark” by Sara Tantlinger, “No More Meatloaf Monday” by Angela Sylvaine, “Silver Alert” by Wendy N. Wagner, “A Sweet Soiree on the Last Night of the World” by Gwendolyn Kiste, “Tuesday” by Brittany Johnston, “Alice” by Chris Mason, “I Am the Vanity Mirror Shaped Like a Skull” by Madison McSweeney, “Muerte Luna” by V. Castro, and “All The Dead Astronauts” by J.A.W. McCarthy.

    Note: I bought both the paperback and ebook versions. Some of the content (a few stories, forward, content warnings, and biographies) was missing from my ebook version. I intend to continue to check for Kindle updates to the electronic file.

  • Elou Carroll

    Disclaimer: I received an early copy of this book due to being one of the contributing authors. As such, this review will be biased. (Unashamedly.)

    I love this book. Brandon Applegate has a brilliant editorial eye—this anthology is at times heart-warming, at times tragic, but (almost*) always incredibly human.

    I don't often marathon-read anthologies or collections. I prefer to dip in and out of them, but from the very first story, I couldn't stop reading. I started yesterday, and finished the final few stories today. Would recommend.

    I might come back and highlight favourites, but for now I need to process.

    What would you do if you knew the world was ending?

    *you'll have to read the book to find out why.

  • Jamedi

    Review originally on
    JamReads

    Reviewing anthologies is usually a difficult task. Your usual scales tend to not fit as well when there are several stories; and in the case of this anthology featuring several short stories, it's even more difficult.

    The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse is a short stories anthology, edited by Brandon Applegate at Hungry Shadow Press, and that features the work of many talented writers. All the stories are related, as they are covering how normal people, not heroes or villains, would live those minutes when the world is ending.

    While I personally enjoyed reading this book, due to the prompt used, you can feel some discomfort in the experience; some stories pack so many emotional punches, and the fact you are seeing normal people struggling hits harder than usual.
    The length of the stories worked in a great way, as most of them were around 5-8 pages (if I remember correctly, 2k-5k words were the submission limit). It's perfect for reading one short story, taking a breath to think about it, and continuing with the next one.

    I should mention two details that I thankful they decided to include: a content warning table at the end of the book, so if you are triggered by something specific you can actively avoid it; and the small details in the physical edition including some images at the start of each chapter.
    If I have to choose three stories/authors from this anthology, I think Rae Knowles, D. Matthew Urban, and Carson Winter nailed perfectly the gravity of the prompt.

    Personally, if you like a different kind of horror, that will make you feel deeply uncomfortable, I recommend this anthology. A really different book, but exactly for that, a great book.

  • Sarah

    (DEUTSCH WEITER UNTEN)


    It just wasn’t my cup of tea.
    I just didn’t warm up to the individual stories and couldn’t get excited about them.

    All were well written, but ... well, just wasn’t my jam.


    (DEUTSCH)


    Das war einfach nicht meins.
    Ich bin mit den einzelnen Geschichten einfach nicht warmgeworden und konnte mich nicht dafür begeistern.

    Alle waren gut geschrieben, aber ... well, war einfach nicht mein Jam.

  • Alannah Cossey

    I haven't shut up about this anthology since I started reading it and I don't think I will any time soon. These stories will stick to your bones. It's fascinating to see where the creative inspirations go for the cause of the end of the world. Though the cause isn't the focus, it's still very interesting to see the ideas brought forward and how imaginative it can be. But yes, the cause of the apocalypse is not what matters. Once you know, accept it, suspend belief and focus on what TRULY matters - the humans at the heart of each story and what they choose to do in their final moments. Some are caught in situations where they need to survive, some take unthinkable actions, some are utterly devastating, some seek out that final bit of pleasure and there is even the odd moment of bitter sweetness; where the death of a known world brings hope for another. One thing is for certain: an existential crisis is a guarantee when you read this and that might be the true horror of it all. A fantastic read that I won't ever forget.

    I was very kindly allowed to read an ARC version of this anthology, I have this review freely and it is entirely my unbiased opinion.

  • Milt Theo

    The anthology 'The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse' is thematically original, stylistically diverse, and emotionally quite heavy. The idea is to focus on people, feelings, experiences, and the ordinary situations in which families, kids, lovers, mothers, daughters, and even animals are forced to undergo amid world-collapsing developments. There are 28 stories, most of them short and with a very strong impact, usually opting to stop right before the disaster, with the result being that they stand like book trailers to whole novels. But, I guess, that's the point: to give a taste, a portrait, a snapshot of an inner narrative. The editor has done an excellent work selecting stories that bring the reader face to face with the real destruction: the one going on the personal level. This makes this anthology unique, and highly recommended.

    I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.

  • Axel Tentacle

    Un thème très intéressant et très angoissant. Le format court est parfait, rarement été immergé en 3 pages.
    Quelques nouvelles vraiment pas folles (mais heureusement très courtes), d’autres géniales et terrifiantes.

  • The Raven Scholar

    Time at the beach, and the apocalypse may seem like two unlikely companions, but after reading “The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse” by Brandon Applegate, while enjoying the sun, and blue skies, I found myself immediately hooked by the individual stories of impending doom. Use to the usual dystopian buildup of the end of the world, the anthology brings to readers, a unique perspective of the moment the apocalypse happening, creating in some stories, an immediate sense of heart-stopping disbelief, the end is actually happening, while caught up in characters, readers, like the characters themselves, have few precious time to get to know, before reaching heart-wrenching endings in many cases.

    Reading each story, while resting after a long day at the beach, brought a mixed sense of trying to relax, while ending each story in a state of euphoria how each writer manages to quickly create, and then destroy the worlds, readers are quickly thrust in with each new story. Applegate has brought to summer reading, a unique take on dystopian writing, while at the same time, challenging individuals, to ask themselves, to experience quickly the life-changing moments, they experience through the eyes of characters they won’t know for too long.

    Each story is short, and for a summer read, or vacation, an excellent choice, if one is open to the opposite of feel-good wrap-up to stories, but instead, allow themselves, to imagine what would they do, themselves, if in five minutes, everything they knew, including what is supposed to be a fun trip to the beach, changes in moments. There is more to the stories, than simply the apocalypse which serves more as a background, than the center of each story in The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse. Instead, there is enough character development where it’s less about what is happening and more about how would people react if they find themselves in the first five minutes of the apocalypse.

    Even though the book was finished long before vacation was done, there were still haunting memories lingering. There are no clear happy endings, which after reading could be considered more subjective than absolute. The cover art for the book itself is haunting as well, and leaves a sense of this is one of those books, after reading, the focus leaves the reader thinking less about the major events, be it an alien invasion, or a natural disaster, but the difficult choices, the devastating choices, and in many cases, choices which require a second and third reading, to comprehend what had actually happened, only to be left with the reaction of awe, and hope it will never be the case in real life, though unfortunately in many cases, there are difficult choices and goodbyes.

    There is a natural rawness to reading “The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse”, due to if readers are expecting answers, or even neatly wrapped endings, in many cases, there are no clear resolutions, often reflecting the natural difficulty and chaos which can be created when a real disaster occurs. While the focus is sometimes on the devastation, the book, neatly, and brokenly at the same time, captures the unfairness which does occur in real life. None of this deflects from the entertainment and sheer power of each story contained within the book, making The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse an insightful what-if, and how would people react in the event of one story, an alien invasion. The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse read like a psychological and emotional study of how would humanity, and not only humanity, but individuals would cope during the first five minutes of an apocalypse.

    Although there is in some stories, no neatly wrapped conclusions, what is left by the end of the book, is a deeper reflection about humanity, our ability and inability to cope with difficult situations, be it small, or big. The stories gathered seemed to be less about trying to come up with an apocalypse heralding the worlds end, and more of both trying to answer and raise questions, about what happens if humanity's, and individuals daily lives were suddenly disrupted without or in some cases, warnings, however brief or long those warnings are given to them.

    The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse is a unique dystopian though not quite a dystopian book, and this is despite the topics which are approached by each of the writers. The cover is misleading in its promise of a dystopian, possibly horror collection of tales, and in the end, becomes something more as each story is read, the book is put down, and the next set of stories is read with trepidation and expectation of what will be revealed by each end.

    Sometimes, the worse part of a natural disaster, and in this case, the apocalypse, isn’t simply the event itself which is happening, but having to confront the human emotions which suddenly come to the surface, after carefully being held under the veneer of civilization, especially when the rules of society goes out the door, and familiar comfort and coping mechanisms suddenly disappear quickly into a rapidly changing world, not by months, but sometimes minutes.

    Disclaimer: I received an advance review copy for free, and am leaving this review voluntarily.

  • Bob

    An absolutely stunning collection of short stories detailing the start of a number of apocalypses

    28 short stories, each individually compelling, there's Zombies, Nuclear War, Aliens, Werewolves and even a killer song in the pages of this collection.

    Some of the stories are heartbreaking, some of them are cathartic and some ae just wildly entertaining.

    Standout stories were:

    The Hunt by Alex Fox, a father tries to keep his daughter safe from an alien invasion

    A Sweet Soiree On The Last Night of the World by Gwendolyn Kiste, A party in a graveyard to celebrate the end, with added revenge

    Tuesday by Brittany Johnston, an office worker tries to get to her family

    The Smell of Summer by Emma E. Murray, the apocalypse through the eyes of a dog

    Well worth your time

  • Sonja

    I got this as a free book through Book Sirens but my thoughts are my own.

    I didn't like this. Most of this stories made me mad or had me emotional down.

    The first 70% no story was good (for me) and after that there were maybe three I kind of liked but it didn't save the book.

    My problem was that barely any of the characters were likeable. Most were just egoistical (yes, it's the end of the world and it's understandable but these people were just mean spirited or had horrible things done too them by other humans). I.e. A mother that draws herself a bath to listen to k-pop while her little kids hammer on the door in terror. FUN

    Most of horror has at least a sliver of hope, dignity or goodness but that was missing here (with one! exeption).

  • Samantha Lokai

    Have you ever thought about the world ending? What would you do if life as you know it was about to end? I think it's crossed our minds at some point even if only brief. It's a horrifying thought if you were to really think about it and in this collection we meet a varied cast of characters as they are faced with this sudden realisation.

    In such circumstances we expect confusion, fear, denial, a determination to survive in some instances, and even acceptance be it painful or peaceful. However, these stories reach beyond these emotions, exposing more complex and conflicted human conditions. Stories such as Bonnie's Absolution which focuses on a mother's internal struggle and Lost Time, in which a man regrets not putting his family first. We journey with desperate parents in tales like The Hunt, about a father and daughter hunting trip that results in the ultimate sacrifice, a mother's race to be with her child in the story, Tuesday and a father's fight to save his children from the inevitable in Estrangements.

    In addition to those, there are also stories that weave together the fantastical and the bizzare like The Boy Who Prayed For The World To End, Alice, The Door In The Basement, Smash Hit and the unconventional and humourous take in Ten Totally Free Places To Watch The End Of The World.

    I especially liked the stories that were told from an alternate perspective such as I Am The Vanity Mirror Shaped Like A Skull where the character mutates into something no longer human, and The Smell Of Summer, told through the eyes of a family pet.

    The stories are imaginative, original and compelling even though heartbreaking and unsettling with some rather intense situations at times. It's the end of the world after all. Make use of the content warnings included if you need to. As the anthology title suggests, The First Five Minutes Of The Apocalypse are stories focused on people's initial discovery/reaction to the world ending and not so much about the how and why or the before and after. With this in mind, I feel that the selection of stories delivered a satisfying insight into these characters lives as they stand on the brink of annihilation.

    There is immense talent and skill within these pages and I'm grateful to these authors for taking me on these wild and exhilarating adventures, thankfully in the safety and comfort of my home without the worry of impending doom!

    Samantha L.

  • Sofia

    I usually really like short stories, they’re like small bites of chocolate with just enough for one to feel satisfied, I knew before starting this book that it would be regular people when faced with their imminent demise, and to tell you the truth, many of this stories they would be great if explored more, but overall I felt a bit on the short end, let me explain what I felt, most stories felt like a first chapter that ended in a cliff hanger, the first one in the book that I felt it was complete circle was “Red rover, Red rover by Tiffany Michelle Brown”, it was a short story about a lady that all she wanted was to get news from her daughter (of course I wont give spoilers) but it was a story that went full circle, and we could look through the looking glass, and this story came after six other stories in witch I felt robbed of an ending, because it is not because the stories are short that don’t deserve an ending, most of the time they can lack details but the ending is clear, even if it gives us a leg to support a continuation…

    I was expecting more stories a bit like the ones in “The apocalypse Triptych” series, but that was not it, and I felt that the stories are well written, I just felt that I was given a tease but when it was supposed to take me somewhere, it just said, that’s all folks, see you in the next one, I don’t doubt that other people will say that they loved it, and can’t wait to read more of the authors that contributed to this book, I also want to read more by some of these authors, I just felt that the stories in this book needed an extra step for me to enjoy them through and through.

    There are a couple of stories in this book that I really enjoyed and I really did fell that while the stories were sad, left me satisfied. So I will still recommend this book, maybe you’ll enjoy much more the open endings than what I enjoyed.

    Thank you BookSirens for the free ARC and this is my honest opinion.

  • Stephanie Manning

    Thank you to BookSirens for providing a review copy.

    I love a themed anthology and apocalyptic horror is my jam, so this book delivered on multiple levels. I liked every story, which is rare in an anthology of this size. It also introduced me to some new authors to check out. 4.25 stars

    Coming Earthside by Taryn Martinez ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
    A Eulogy for the Fifth World by Carson Winter ⭐⭐⭐⭐
    Estrangements by D. Matthew Urban ⭐⭐⭐.5
    The Viridescent Dark by Sara Tantlinger ⭐⭐⭐.75
    The Hunt by Alex Fox ⭐⭐⭐.5
    Red Rover, Red Rover by Tiffany Michelle Brown ⭐⭐⭐
    No More Meatloaf Monday by Angela Sylvaine ⭐⭐⭐
    Bonnie's Ablution by M. Lopez de Silva ⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
    The Scream by Andrew Cull ⭐⭐⭐⭐
    The Door in the Basement by Ruth Anna Evans ⭐⭐⭐.5
    Silver Alert by Wendy N. Wagner ⭐⭐⭐
    A Sweet Soiree on the Last Night of the World by Gwendolyn Kiste ⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
    The Boy Who Prayed for the End of the World by Olen Crowe ⭐⭐⭐
    Tuesday by Brittany Johnston ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
    Dirt and Blood and Silence by Elou Carroll ⭐⭐⭐⭐.25
    Ten Totally Free Places to Watch the End of the World by Nick Bouchard ⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
    Anymore by L. Marie Wood ⭐⭐⭐
    The End of the World is Very Fucking Nigh by W. Dale Jordan ⭐⭐⭐⭐.75
    When the Horizon Burns by Elford Alley ⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
    Alice by Chris Mason ⭐⭐⭐.5
    Smash Hit by Matthew M. Bartlett ⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
    I Am the Vanity Mirror Shaped Like A Skull by Madison McSweeney ⭐⭐⭐⭐.25
    Eyes Open, Knees Apart for the End of the World by Rae Knowles ⭐⭐⭐.5
    Endless Possibilities by RJ Joseph ⭐⭐⭐.25
    The Smell of Summer by Emma E. Murray ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
    Muerte Luna by V. Castro ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
    Lost Time by Eóin Murphy ⭐⭐⭐⭐.25
    All the Dead Astronauts by J.A.W. McCarthy ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • Carol

    I tend to drop short story collections in the middle. I tend to be very picky and the moment I feel like something is a chore to read, I put it down and DNF. I have DNFed some very anticipated short story collections like this and tend to avoid them.

    This one I finished in one day.

    I was mostly lured in by the cover and the premise. It was pretty cheap as well so me and my friend got it without very high expectations but I was curious. I started reading it and got hooked.

    Sure, there are stories that are a miss but the hits hit HARD. What I love about apocalypse stories is how they can fill you with both dread and sadness. The first story in this collection is in the first category but I also found many that belong to the second. The variety of perspectives and reactions to the end of the world the authors presented was truly refreshing and I highly anticipated what awaits me on the next page. I also loved to see all the different ideas on how the world ends and what causes it.
    My favorite stories were Dirt and Blood and Silence as well as The Viridescent Dark. They both broke my heart.

    If you want to feel a delightful mixture of dread, sadness, and anxiety, you absolutely should check this book out. Make sure to check the trigger warnings though, because some of the content can be upsetting.

  • Alana

    My goal was to get this book done before it came out, having been sent a review copy. I could not do it. Maybe I'm a seasonal reader and the recent sunny days have made it impossible for me to be in the right headspace, or maybe I was in exactly the right headspace and the onslaught of tiny apocalypses in this book are overwhelming. Maybe I'm emotionally a baby since 2020 and I can only handle so much of the world ending AND ALSO this book has some truly enthralling short stories that take only a few moments and draw you in. Over. And over. And over.

    I started spacing out the stories and reading romance between them, happily-ever-afters jammed between fear and death and destruction. I read superheroes saving the day. I won't tell you if anyone is saved here but let's be realistic.

    So I am finally finished this book only a few days later than expecting (a little teary at "All the Dead Astronauts), this book I could have taken a year to read and would have loved as much, but maybe would have done less emotional damage. Thanks, Hungry Shadow Press!...I guess.

  • Robin Ginther-Venneri

    I must say, all the stories were exceptional. It's truly impressive how these authors can create such vivid and captivating tales with so few words. However, "When the Horizon Burns," "Coming Earthside," and "Tuesday" really left me feeling emotionally gutted. "Alice" and "Silver Alert" struck a chord with me because of their optimism. "Bonnie's Ablution" and "The Door in the Basement" made my teeth hurt.
    "A Sweet Soiree on the Last Night of the World," "The Boy Who Prayed for the World to End," Dirt and Blood and Silence" were sad and spoke of consequences.
    I absolutely loved "The Hunt" and "I Am the Vanity Mirror Shaped Like a Skull."
    I could go on and on, but this was an enjoyable anthology for anyone who loves to read about The End. I seriously recommend it.

    Favorite Line:
    "That's what people thought of when terror came from the sky, right? That's what they said in the movies like aliens didn't have anything else to do but to mess with the good people of Earth and take over the planet like squatters."

    5 Star Read Rating
    3 Skull Dread Read Rating

  • Horror DNA

    The apocalypse is nothing new in horror fiction. Post-apocalyptic stories are a favorite of writers, showcasing characters navigating what the world has become after the end. The First Five Minutes of the Apocalypse dares to explore pre-apocalyptic fiction, showing doomed characters coping and dealing with the events before the inevitable end arrives.

    You can read
    Zachary Rosenberg's full review at Horror DNA by
    clicking here.

  • Aaron Lindsey

    What is a fun collection! The theme here is 'the start of the end', and features normal people (much like you and me) and even a dog. As with most anthologies, I loved some stories and liked others. But unlike other anthologies, I didn't dislike ANY of these stories! All of these were worth reading.

    What do you think of when you think of the Apocalypse? Chances are you'll find that in this book. Zombies? Check. Intergalactic Aliens? Bingo. Not to mention the asteroids, pandemics, or war, etc.

    There's 24 stories here, so if you read one per evening (as I did) you're in for a few weeks of fears.

  • Joe Ortlieb

    This isn't a book that is read, it's a book that is felt.
    Once you get past the bad ass cover and get to the meat and bones of the pages it's all over. The stories contained inside are amazing. I found after reading some of them that I had to find my kids and hug them. I would love to see some expand into something more. Everyone that was included brought their A game and then some. So if you're looking for short stories that will rip your heart out then feed it to you over and over. This is the book for you.

  • Noura Navali

    Wow! I didn't expect this book to make me think about my life choices, but it certainly did. Honestly, I expected something else because of the cover. When I started this book, I thought it would be about the first minutes of a zombie apocalypse or something like that, something supernatural. But it was so ordinary, hence the four stars. Just because of the expectations. I liked some of the stories and some of them, I loved them. Anyway, worth reading to give a reset to your brain and start making some life changing decisions.

  • Kim Napolitano

    Amazing, terrifying and ultimately sad. Where do want to be when the world is about to end? Some stories are gruesome and bloody, some puts you near tears. I enjoyed them all! Not a comfortable read by no means but puts humanity on a spotlight that one day there will be an end.

    Highly recommended if you enjoy the genre! Many stories can be triggering for some so take care for the warnings at the back of the book. Read maybe after the holidays and I’d love to hear your thoughts!