I’ll preface this review by saying that I don’t read or watch a lot of fiction involving zombies. You’ll know, from my reviews, that I really like horror fiction. However, I like my horror to actually have the chance of characters surviving…even if that doesn’t happen the majority of the time.
This book isn’t exactly about zombies, although the people who lose their minds after looking up at the sky certainly share characteristics with zombies. After all, they’re overtaken by rage that makes them unable to see anything else; literally, as they’re turned blind. This phenomenon doesn’t actually strike everyone in the world…although it’s not actually clear whether some people don’t turn just because they don’t look up at the sky, or if they too are immune. Some of those people who didn’t look up at the sky and didn’t turn at the start of the book actually end up looking at the sky later on…and end up turning.
I don’t think I can blame the people who look up at the sky, to be perfectly honest. After all, if I saw a whole lot of people stopping and looking up at the sky, I’d probably do the exact same thing. In that respect, I think the author did a really good job of capturing that sense of curiosity that a lot of people have. If something’s happening, a lot of people are going to look.
There are a lot of tense scenes in this first book, especially after the initial crack in the sky appears. By that point, everyone knows that something is causing people to lose their minds and turn on everyone else around them…and most of them are waiting for the next incident to occur. The countdown to when, especially from the perspective of those who get early warning signals (the loss of hearing and the sensation that someone’s watching them) was enough to keep me on the edge of my seat.
I do feel there could have been less POV characters in this book, as the constant switching didn’t leave me with enough time to connect emotionally with many of those characters who only appeared for a chapter or two. I did care a lot about what was happening to Gina, Mark and Tommy, though, as they were the ones I got to know the most over the course of the book.
By the end of this book, I was left with a lot more questions than answers. And, of course, it ended on something of a cliffhanger. I am intrigued enough to read the next books in the series at some point in the future, though, as I’m keen to get the answers to some of my questions.


