“The meek shall inherit the Earth, unless the rich get there first.” That’s the reality of the post-apocalyptic world in this electrifying debut thriller.
The near future…
Climate disasters have crippled the United States. With half the country under water and the other half a dust bowl, civil unrest would soon escalate into something darker, something unstoppable. Billionaire John Brandt anticipated this and channeled his money, power, and influence into being prepared for the great unraveling.
Now Brandt, his family, and his security team must retreat to Sanctuary, their underground bunker—a vast luxury mansion beneath the parched earth of the Nebraskan Great Plains. But they are not alone. Above ground a group of raiders are desperate to survive and will use any means possible to accomplish that goal.
As tensions mount both inside and out, battle lines are drawn— between the haves and the have-nots, between decency and expediency, between life and death. In this game, everyone's a loser.
Where many climate-related societal collapse stories read like tumbleweeds, their desiccated perspectives as hollow as the futures of their own doomed characters, Sanctuary stands like a monolith meant to outlast the ravages of time with its vital message.
A propulsive, captivating thriller that gives its readers time to contemplate the bigger picture, this book is perfect for fans of apocalyptic fiction like McCarthy's The Road and Stephen King's The Stand. Cleary uses restrained poetic language and a straightforward delivery with authentic Dust Bowl history to contextualize a hypothetical future that becomes all too real in relatively few pages. For a thought-provoking, entertaining take on climate disaster fiction, you won't do better than Sanctuary.
A big thank you to Edelweiss and Penguin Random House for the ARC.
If you are needing a good binge watching experience, Ive got a suggestion... James Cleary's debut thriller, Sanctuary! I can't remember when I last read a book that literally read like a video series on a streaming service.
Now it might sound crazy to compare a book to a show, but the effect for me when I read the first page was the same as when I have sat down to an addictive season of a show. I was hooked from the first page and sat glued to the book, turning pages in a binge worthy fashion, simply unable to walk away until the last page was finished. Cleary's writing was so vivid and action packed that the scenes played out right in front of me as I tore through the story.
In a post apocalyptic United States, climate disasters have completely changed the viability of the environment. The seasides are flooding and the great plains have become desserts with farmland in such extreme drought that the soil has become the enemy. Dust storms burying the lands and causing physical danger to all who are exposed to it. No water, no vegetation, no game to hunt. Survival now depends on foraging and ingenuity, unless...
Unless you are a mega-billionaire who can build a fortress. John Brandt, a man with money and power prepared. He used millions building a veritable fortress in an abandoned nuclear missile silo. Under the Nebraska soil, Brandt takes his family along with a command security force and workers necessary for survival. These include a cook, her daughter, a botanist specializing in aquaponics and a medical doctor, just enough personnel to stay alive. The fortress is a luxury bunker that includes every amenity arranged to simulate life before and enough food and water for 50 people to last three years. Brandt's family and workers could very probably have enough for 10 years. The only problem is, others have found them.
The world outside the bunker is a war zone. rioting and killing to survive. Some workers employed by Brandt's firm to build his underground fortress have returned in hope of aid. He has everything and they are dying. They have been surviving as raiders. Now they will do anything to stay alive. In this world, no one wins, not even those who think they hold all the cards.
I was completely immersed in Cleary's world. It made me uncomfortable to look around my home and town and see the waste and abundance we all take for granted. I felt convicted when I read about Brandt's family and their waste, knowing I am guilty of excess myself. The story made me think. The possible realism was frightening yet overwhelmingly compelling. His characters were so well developed that I felt what they felt, saw what they saw, and loved and abhorred them all at the same time. That is the finesse of an awe inspiring author.
I am hungry for more books from Cleary in the future. He definitely has infinite talent.
Sanctuary will be published April 28, 2026 from Penguin Random House. I hope you grab a copy and read it too. Sanctuary is well worth your time.
Thank you so much to NetGalley for the Advanced Reader's Copy of Sanctuary by James Cleary in exchange for an honest review.
James Cleary delivers a chilling start to his novel Sanctuary. The novel starts as an eco-thriller with climate change resulting in rising sea levels and resource scarcity. It progresses into a post-apocalyptic scenario centering on survival in a ruined world and a dystopian situation featuring an oppressive and controlled society. Will it ever end?
The story is mainly set in rural northwestern Nebraska, 46 miles northwest of Crawford Butte. Climate disasters have resulted in a large part of the United States being either under water or a dust bowl. Civil unrest erupts quickly. Billionaire John Brandt anticipated this and used his power, money, and influence to prepare for it. However, the suddenness of riots and looting catches even him and his family and team by surprise.
They must retreat to Sanctuary; an underground bunker he has prepared for the inevitable time this occurs. However, they’re not alone. A group of raiders arrive above ground and take over the mansion that is also on the site. They’re desperate to survive and tensions mount both inside and outside of the bunker. Who will survive? How long will the unrest last? It’s a battle between those who prepared and those who didn’t, the wealthy and the middle class, and between decency and selfishness.
The story is a combination of a linear story with non-linear journal entries written by one of individuals in the bunker. I didn’t think the journal entries were necessary as they took away from the flow of the story. The ideas and concepts could have been presented in the main storyline. Additionally, a few parts of the story felt rushed. The author does a great job of world-building making it easy to visualize the bunker, the mansion, and the surrounding desolation. The ending brought everything to a conclusion that fit with the genre and storyline, but felt abrupt. Additionally, the epilogue didn’t give sufficient information on what has happened in the interval. Despite this, I was captivated by this page-turner that has threads of group dynamics, ethics, selfishness, family, and much more.
Overall, this is an intriguing and gripping near-future thriller with action and suspense as well as memorable characters.
Berkley Publishing Group – Berkley and James Cleary provided a complimentary digital ARC of this novel via NetGalley. All thoughts and opinions expressed in this review are my own. Publication date is currently set for April 28, 2026. ------------------------------ My 3.89 rounded to 4 stars review is coming soon.
In this near future dystopia, civil unrest has turned into all-out rioting in the streets of America, both urban and rural. Dramatic climate change has created desperate conditions.
Land even many miles from the coasts has been flooded. The central plains have turned into a giant dust bowl as all the plants and animals have died off, the all the pesticide laden soil permeates the air. People are looting and building buildings in rage, and President (very MAGA) like declares an emergency to deploy solders.
In the streets of Miami, billionaire Brandt, his wife and son get whisked off by their high-paid ex-military security to head to their luxury bomb shelter. Their daughter is picked up off a mountain in South America to join them. Their security team rush to the family, and other key essential personnel, to a giant mansion in the middle of the Nebraska Great Plains, and the massive underground former nuclear silo that John Brandt has spent untold resources to convert to a luxury bunker he's named Sanctuary.
Brandt is your typical narcissistic billionaire, self-absorbed, powerful, ruthless, and with ambitions to emerge from the crisis heading up a newly reconstructed American government. His superficial wife, a beauty who’s mostly absorbed in her workout routine sublimates any emotions in the face of Brandt’s dominance. Their young son, fragile and anxious, experiences the most trauma moving underground into the bunker. Their twenty-something daughter resents being cut off from her hedonistic, adventure seeking lifestyle.
But Brandt has not planned for everything. He’s got his exceptional trained ex-military security, and the long-time family cook and her young adult daughter, but many people he counted on arriving at the Silo failed to get extricated in time. The biggest thing that Brandt failed to anticipate nearby survivors desperate for food and shelter and facing death, willing to go over the top to breach the bunker. And a couple of these survivors worked on the construction of the bunker near their Nebraska hometowns.
It's a tense, thrilling show down between the haves and the have-nots, between ruthlessness and human decency. It’s also far too credible a future dystopian scenario as real-life billionaires currently build out survival bunkers for themselves. You may come into this book with resentment for the callous selfishness of today’s billionaires, but you’ll definitely leave it hating them.
And the ending deeply satisfies.
Thanks to Berkley Publishing Group and NetGalley for an advance reader’s copy.
Remember “All-ee, All-ee in Come Free!” Or some variation from childhood games of hide-and-seek? When home base was safe?
A near future version for adults has been re-imagined with much more chilling consequences.
Set in the near future, James Cleary’s 2026 dystopian novel, “Sanctuary", pictures an American apocalypse brought on by depleted resources for food and water production created by accelerated climate change and erupting rapidly into a struggle between haves and have-not.
After declaring martial law, the government is nowhere to be found leaving pockets of citizens to fend for themselves. Crops have failed; an immense dust cloud, day and night, pervades the world not unlike the 1930s Dust Bowl. People are rioting and looting.
Within this environment Cleary’s plot zeros in on the battles around a remote subterranean Nebraska compound owned by wealthy John Brandt, his family, staff and mercenaries defending against local residents trying to survive in a dunelike landscape.
The tale unfolds through a variety of perspectives alternating between different people on both sides and counterpointed by diary entries of someone within the compound – sometimes present, sometimes the future – as the main story unfolds with its own traditional timeline.
Who survives, how they get there are the key drivers for engaging readers. At times it can be a little confusing since many people are involved creating disjointed emotional focus. The diary entries work sometimes; other times distract from either the plot or the mindset of the diary writer. This may be intentional to relay the confusion of the circumstances.
The overall perspective follows the late 1950s-early 1960s traditions set by Nevil Shute’s “On the Beach” and Walter M. Miller Jr.’s “A Canticle for Leibowitz” when the potential for worldwide atomic oblivion seemed imminent with little regard for consequences. However, the social divide is more akin to George Orwell and Aldous Huxley visions.
The parallels to the current state of global affairs, especially the US, with the divides between oligarchs and the majority of workers are clearly intentional in this novel. Especially with recent news mentions of executive bunkers for wealthy individuals and their families.
A novelistic meditation on an alternative future before the future becomes the present.
(Footnote: my rating is 3.5. The concept is stronger than the execution in certain places.)
This post-apocalyptic novel centers on a bunker run by a rigid, morally inflexible leader who refuses to help people on the outside. The premise sets up a powerful moral pressure cooker: who do we become when survival depends on exclusion?
The character work is where the book shines. The leader’s wife has the most compelling arc, shifting from quiet complicity to a dawning, horrified clarity about what her husband’s choices really mean. Her evolution gives the story emotional depth and suggests a reckoning is coming. I also appreciated the people outside the bunker who were simply trying to survive and connect with those inside — those moments carried real humanity. The hinted-at romance between the two women had strong potential and could have provided a meaningful counterpoint to the bunker’s emotional isolation, but it never felt fully explored.
Where the book lost me was the ending. The escalation into near-total devastation felt abrupt and, ultimately, unearned. Major character deaths — including the leader’s daughter — didn’t seem to arise organically from the story’s moral tensions. Instead of feeling like the inevitable consequence of the characters’ choices, the conclusion came across as a blunt clearing of the board. The few survivors who flee and later return to see who’s left could have offered a powerful reflective coda, but their survival didn’t feel thematically grounded enough to carry that weight.
I don’t mind bleak. I mind arbitrary. This story built rich moral tension around isolation, control, and conscience — especially through the wife’s arc — but the ending sidestepped that tension rather than resolving it. There is strong character work here and moments of genuine emotional impact, but the final act left me more frustrated than moved.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Sanctuary is a gripping, bleak, and emotionally charged novel about survival. The story takes place in the Great Plains of the United States in the not-too-distant future. The country has become a wasteland because of the government's failure to take the proper steps to save our environment from total decay. Billionaire John Brandt has been preparing for this disaster for years as he secretly created the world's most secure and self-sustaining bunker somewhere in Nebraska. Brandt's goal was to save his family of four and a few necessary individuals needed to secure their future. These individuals include a security team, Brandt's housekeeper and her daughter, a doctor, a hydroponic grower, and a scientist to protect and provide for Brandt's family. What Brandt didn't anticipate was how far people faced with death would go to save themselves. A small group of gritty survivors comes upon Brandt's sanctuary and proves they will take every measure to keep living. This sets up a fascinating story about two divergent groups who attempt to survive in different ways. Author James Cleary creates some memorable characters that the reader gets to meet during this ordeal. Even though the environment is the driving force behind the story, this is a novel that is character-driven. Some of the scenes are gut-wrenching and will stick with readers for quite a while. Recommended!
I'd like to thank Net Galley, the Berkley Publishing Group, and the author for providing me with an advanced reading copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
This is about what I would expect to happen when the climate collapse starts - it becomes 'the rest of us' vs the billionaires that spent a bunch of money on building huge bunkers to survive in. This does take a little while to get all the characters straight, as there are a lot of them with the alternating POVs from those in the bunker and those outside the bunker. At times it did feel a little like not a whole lot was happening then we would get a bunch of action all at once, so the pacing felt a little off at times. I would have loved to get a little more in depth with a few of the characters and really get into their minds. The moral of the story here is that when shit ultimately does hit the fan and climate catastrophe hits us, we all need to work together and not continue on with this hierarchy of 'us vs them'.
In Sanctuary, author James Cleary paints an all-too-possible, one might even say inevitable, near future. Scientists warn of an ecological disaster creeping forward. What the world is unprepared for is the tipping point, the threshold at which sustainable life collapses rapidly and completely. Only the astronomically wealthy are prepared for the catastrophic event. They have built impenetrable bunkers designed to sustain life for years underground, and only the astronomically wealthy get to decide who will be sheltered within those bunkers, while those left outside must fight to survive.
The well-researched technology Cleary uses in Sanctuary creates a believable, foreseeable, and visceral future for readers. But what sets this apocalyptic tale apart is the author’s command of language, his understanding of universal conflict, and his use of lyrical prose, all of which make for riveting storytelling. Make no mistake, the story begins at the brink of disaster and maintains a heart-pounding pace, never delving into philosophical moments, but rather tackling them head-on with relentless action. Like in life, there is no black and white, no absolutes, no fail-safes, no good guys or bad guys, just bad choices piled on top of more bad choices. One can only hope that mercy, that “twice blessed” human quality, triumphs.
It's a pleasure to read a well-told story by a skilled writer. 5 Stars for Sanctuary by James Cleary.
Merci à @gleephapp et aux @editions_gallmeister de m'avoir permis de lire en avant-première ce roman.
Ce roman, captivant et profond, incite à la réflexion. Dès les premières pages, le lecteur est entraîné par le rythme soutenu des chapitres courts qui structurent efficacement l’intrigue. L’alternance entre deux temporalités, notamment grâce au journal de bord d’un personnage, apporte une réelle dynamique à la narration. Après le déclenchement de la catastrophe, le récit suit simultanément les survivants réfugiés dans un bunker luxueux, bénéficiant de nombreuses commodités (garde-manger, piscine, piste de bowling), et ceux confrontés à la dure réalité d’un monde dévasté où chaque besoin se transforme en lutte. Cette opposition entre deux univers crée une tension constante tout au long du livre, maintenant l’intérêt du lecteur quant au sort des protagonistes. Tous les personnages sont amenés à faire des choix difficiles, souvent guidés par l’égoïsme ou la peur, remettant ainsi en question leur humanité. Ces décisions peuvent avoir des conséquences lourdes sur leur avenir. Un aspect remarquable du roman réside dans son réalisme : l’intrigue ne repose pas sur des éléments exagérés ou de science-fiction, mais sur des situations plausibles, ce qui rend la lecture d’autant plus immersive. Ce degré de vraisemblance suscite l’engagement du lecteur, désireux de découvrir le destin des personnages, qui pourrait potentiellement refléter le sien.
Sanctuary by James Cleary is a dystopian science fiction novel told in the third person. The story begins with a rising tension that immediately pulled me in,I could feel the drama building through Cleary’s prose from the very start. The narrative moves between different threads of the story across the chapters, giving me a sense of the wider picture and hinting at where the journey might be heading. This shifting perspective added depth and kept my curiosity alive as the plot unfolded. What stood out most was the pacing. One moment the writing delivered intense tension and drama, and the next it slowed almost deliberately, allowing a pause before the next surge of action. It felt as though the story was giving my mind a brief moment of calm before the next emotional hit. At times I could feel the fear in the characters’ situations, and at others their desperation seeped through the pages. The world Cleary created felt vividly real, which is a testament to his ability as a storyteller. Overall, Sanctuary is a gripping dystopian read that balances tension with thoughtful pacing. James Cleary’s writing creates an atmosphere that feels both unsettling and immersive, drawing me deeper into the story with each chapter. It’s a novel that lingers, leaving me reflecting on the characters’ struggles and the world they inhabit long after the final page.
3 ⭐️ First, thank you to Berkley Publishing Group, James Cleary, and NetGalley for allowing me to preview this title before its publication date of April 28, 2026.
When I started this book, my first thought was that this is strangely like the craziness happening today. Climate catastrophe, billionaires buying the government and judicial systems, angry citizens, and societal collapse (not quite to that one yet). A billionaire who knows that the US is on the verge of collapse, repurposes a decommissioned missile silo into a luxury bunker, complete with hand picked elite who will serve the owner. It then becomes a case of the haves on the inside, and the have nots on the outside.
The story was fast paced but I did feel like it dragged a bit at times. The thing that frustrated me what that the journal entries at the beginning were not in chronological order, making the overall storyline confusing, and it seemed that the journal entries are numbered longer than the person writing them was in the bunker. I don't know. There was a long list of characters and while there were a few that were highlighted, looking back, I felt like I knew them only surface level. I was not overly invested in their lives.
This book was perfectly okay. I do not feel that I wasted my time reading it, but I cannot say that I would recommend it either.
In this dystopian novel, climate changed has wreaked havoc on the US, causing droughts, floods and stirring civil unrest. Billionaires like John Brandt have built underground bunkers to house their families with supplies to last decades, if necessary. When the country finally explodes into lawlessness, Brandt moves his family and security team into his bunker, called Sanctuary, to survive. But when a band of ordinary citizens descend upon his compound demanding entry, his long rage plans are put to the test. Sanctuary raises the basic question of what would you do to protect and provide for your loved ones, and poses the ethical and moral dilemmas that attaches to that question. The book explores those dilemmas, and how each group responds is the core of the story without preaching or judgement. Well written and fairly fast paced with interesting characters and a storyline that hooks you in quickly and keeps you there throughout. Not a unique setting, but a highly entertaining and thoughtful book. I received an ARC of this book from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
This is a story about what people will do in order to survive. It highlights the differences between the wealthy and privileged and those who are disadvantaged. Because of what the human race has doen to this planet, the effects of climate change are catastrophic James Cleary's Sanctuary. The majority of this story takes places in the Nebraskan underground bunker. A group of wealthy and privileged people have come together with everything you can possibly want and need while the outside world is in turmoil. Outside people are lacking even the most basic of necessities such as clean air and water. A group of raiders come upon the bunker and they will do everything they can to be able to get inside in order to survive.
I gave this book 3.5 stars because even though I found some characters relatable, others I found hard to connect to. I also found the story a little disjointed when it transitioned from the POV of one group to the other. All in all, I found the book to be an easy read and a pretty good story.
Thank you to Netgallery for providing me an advanced copy of this book.
In the world of Sanctuary, climate change has wreaked havoc on the US bringing them to the brink of social collapse. Their world is full of droughts, floods and unrest.
John Brandt knew it was coming and built underground bunkers to house his family and those people closest to him as well as his security team. Stating clearly there was absolutely no exceptions for anyone else, especially the strangers that stormed the Sanctuary and took over it.
Both sides are committed to getting what they want and will not back down.
The tension that builds with each chapter was exciting and I couldn’t wait to see what each side would do next. I was on the edge of my seat just waiting for all the chaos to break loose and boy did it.
Once I started I couldn’t stop, I devoured it and loved every second. This author brought a whole world and characters to life so easily. I’m a fan.
James Cleary did an amazing job of keeping me hooked and addicted to the storyline. It’s gripping, emotional, complex and heartbreaking at times.
The Sanctuary is a fast paced thriller, perfect for fans of apocalyptic fiction and survival books/shows.
When I read the description about America on the brink of environmental and social collapse, and the world ending, I wasn’t going to request this book. It didn’t sound like my cup of tea at all, but then I read ‘SANCTUARY is a gripping, thought-provoking, utterly unputdownable thriller’ and I changed my mind. I’m so glad I did. It was complex but fabulous. I never repeat the story in a review (what’s the point, it’s in the description). All I need to know about a book is how did you feel while you were reading it? Well, I felt intrigued and gripped, and couldn’t wait to turn the page to find out what happened next. It was, as it said in the description, thought-provoking and utterly unputdownable and I was immersed in the story. It made me gasp at times, and I wanted to cry at times. The writing was excellent, and I felt as if I knew all the main characters. An absolutely brilliant read, and deserving of 5 stars. Thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for this amazing arc.
This was a gripping dystopian thriller that I devoured in less than 24 hours. It’s incredibly thought-provoking and constantly had me questioning where I would draw the line between helping others and protecting my own family. A couple times, I caught myself agreeing with the billionaire “villain”, which was unsettling, yet I also deeply understood the desperation of the other families and knew I’d risk everything for my child. My moral compass was all over the place in the best way.
The only thing keeping this from five stars is the limited character development. I wanted more depth so the emotional impact could hit harder. In such a high-stakes, eerily realistic future, I expected to feel more personally invested in at least one character. While the tension and ethical dilemmas were strong, I never fully connected on a deeper emotional level.
Overall, this is a fast-paced, morally complex read that will leave you thinking long after you turn the final page.
Thank you to Berkley Publishing Group and Netgalley for this ARC edition in exchange for an honest review.
I loved Sanctuary for so many reasons. The series of events leading up to the devastation felt so plausible it made me uncomfortable at times. I loved the introduction of the estate house and the juxtaposition of the groups within each faction. I did have a bit of trouble keeping track of the characters in the estate house and would have liked a bit more development for them so that I felt a greater emotional attachment to them and their journeys.
I loved the multi-point-of-view storytelling being intercut with journal entries that matched the emotional elements of those in Sanctuary.
While I loved the story, I was not sold on the epilogue and I think it ties back to my lack of emotional connection to several of the characters. I personally didn’t feel that the payout at the end landed or for me for all the characters. I think I would’ve liked it more had it focused on a singular person.
Thank you to NetGalley and Berkley Publishing Group for providing an advanced copy for me to read and review.
4.0 ⭐️ Desperate people trying to invade an underground mansion.
Half of the US is underwater, and the other half is a dust bowl. Billionaire John Brandt knew this day was coming and used his power and money to be prepared. Deep in the earth of the Nebraska Great Plains is the Sanctuary, a luxurious underground mansion. But others are desperate to survive and will do anything to get a piece of what Brandt has created.
What would you do in this situation? That was the question that was constantly on my mind as each side of the conflict tried to justify its actions. They both do good and bad things. They both do these things from the truest place in their heart. Surviving and protecting their loved ones. This book is fast-paced and will constantly have you flipping sides. Agreeing and then disagreeing with each character, and in a lot of cases, being unable to decide what you would do yourself if put in a similar conflict. While the downfall of society can feel far-fetched, the actions of those involved are not.
Wow - you expect dystopian, apocalyptic novels to be sad, but this one is heartbreakingly sad. But it also makes you think about what you would do to survive. Would you help others if it means that there may be less for you? What would you do to protect or save your children?
This is a story about a billionaire who predicted a climate disaster and built a bunker for his crew and his family to hole up in while the country descends into chaos. Then there is a group of locals who know the bunker is there and show up wanting to be let in or given supplies and medicine. As the tension escalates between these two groups, sides are chosen and betrayals happen.
The story was compelling and the action rarely let up. This situation felt almost too real which made the story even scarier. A very captivating read.
Thank you to Netgalley and Berkley Publishing for providing this free ARC. All opinions are my own.
People don't inherit the earth - the earth inherits their dust.
This is reminiscent of the dread I felt reading Cormac McCarthy's "The Road." The lifeless plains destroyed by human disregard for the earth, resulting in a primitive struggle for survival in a civil war where factions are largely nameless and death is common and brutal.
It is also the story of when money corrupts and power destroys, here in the age of billionaires attempting to manipulate the masses to their whims. Kind of like that dream of being able to escape earth and start over on another planet, except the spaceship blows up along the way.
Feeling a little worried and overwhelmed? Read this and let that anxiety go for a walk. With the author's love for both the written and spoken word, imagine what the movie will be like.
Sanctuary by James Cleary delivers an intriguing premise and a tense, atmospheric setting that immediately draws readers in. The story’s survival-driven stakes and sense of looming danger create a steady undercurrent of suspense, especially as the characters navigate a harsh and uncertain world.
While the concept is compelling, the pacing can feel uneven at times, with slower sections that interrupt the momentum. Some characters are interesting but could benefit from deeper development, making it harder to fully connect with their struggles and choices.
Overall, Sanctuary offers a solid, suspenseful read with moments of real tension and intrigue. Readers who enjoy survival-themed fiction and stark, moody settings will find plenty to appreciate, even if the story doesn’t fully reach its potential.
Thanks to Netgalley for an advanced copy of this book.
If you're not a huge fan of social commentary told through an apocalyptic series of events, this probably isn't the one for you. If you are, as I am, then this is a great one. It's not a new concept, but the execution is wonderful. It's a good reflection on who truly owns things and if we really live in a meritocracy as many billionaires love to opine. The only issue I can point out is that I could have used a little more background on the main characters to give them more depth and *SPOILER*
I thought the "poisoning" was going to come back in some significant way. I understand that it's the driver for the estate house group to call off all the rules and fully attack the bunker, but I think it could have been an exciting Chekhov's pesticides twist.
I went into this one with high expectations, and while it had all the right ingredients, it never quite came together.
The premise is solid and there’s definitely potential in the story, but it felt like the characters never got pushed far enough. I kept waiting for more depth, especially when it came to their internal struggles, and it just didn’t fully deliver.
The world building also felt a bit thin. I wanted more detail and immersion to really ground the story, but it stayed a little too surface level.
Overall, it’s not a bad read, just one that could’ve been a lot more if it had dug a little deeper.
I really really wanted to like this book. The concept of the story intrigued me because I love a good post apocalyptic/dystopian setting, but it just didn’t hit the way I was hoping. Unfortunately I just didn’t connect or care about any of the characters at all. The story seemed really disjointed and hard to follow because of the pacing. I also wasn’t overly fond of the writing style either.
There wasn’t a lot of world building, it felt like the author just kind of threw you into the chaos and hoped we figured it out. It was definitely more character focused. And that made it hard for me to enjoy when I didn’t care about any of them.
I’d like to thank NetGalley and the Berkley for giving me the opportunity to read this eARC in exchange for my honest review.
If you're s fan of The Stand by Stephen King or The Road by Cornac McCarthy, then this is the read for you.
There is quite a flooded market of post apocalyptic thrillers, I must say, and many of them come and go without making much of a fuss, but Sanctuary is something a little different and stands tall amidst the white noise of others that have come before it.
It's a thought provoking, intense story that begins as a climate disaster tale, with rising sea levels and everything that comes with that, but it then progresses quite rapidly into a post apocalyptic narrative of survival in a dangerous, devastated world.
With a great dystopian, near future feel, it's intelligently written, fast paced and utterly believable.
Thank you to NetGalley for the ARC of Sanctuary by James Cleary.
Sanctuary is one of those rare thrillers that grips you from the opening pages and never lets go. I will admit to having leaky eyes during this heart wrenching story. The author blends atmosphere, character and tension with real skill, creating a story that really engages the reader and utterly compulsive.
I loved how the tension builds chapter by chapter through small, unsettling details that slowly grow around the characters.
For me this was completely absorbing and very hard to put down. Be prepared to care a lot about the characters and be a little heart broken.
I sadly had to DNF this book 35% of the way through. There are a lot of characters and perspective/timeline switching throughout which left me unable to really empathise with anyone or keep track of what was happening. The background on 'the end of the world' seemed very vaguely sketched out. There is also a totally unnecessary scene describing a female character having a shower with a lot of unneeded detail which very much showed that this was written by a male author. At 35% I didn't really understand who anyone was or why I should care who had control of the bunker so I put it down.
This is a novel about radical change in the climate that leaves two groups: the haves (the very rich) that have access to resources to last years and the have nots (everyone else) who have limited resources that will not last very long. The main storyline is about the struggle between the two groups with misunderstandings and mistrust taking place throughout the novel. Man’s inhumanity to man.
I received a free Kindle copy of this book courtesy of publisher with the understanding that I would post a review on Goodreads, Net Galley, Amazon, and my fiction book review blog.
This was just not my thing. The book started off strong, and I liked the idea of the plot a lot. However, the book has a lot of characters, which means we don't really get to know any of them at a deep level. It was also hard to keep track of them and care too much about their stories. There also really wasn't much tension or much going on. For such an action-packed plot, I found myself bored. If you're looking for a higher level, fast-paced thriller this fits. If you want more depth to the characters, this isn't it.