Fiction

Fiction

Friday, April 22, 2016

Review: Life First by R.J. Crayton

   Life First takes place one hundred years into a post apocalyptic nation. After the pandemics wiped out eighty percent of the world’s population, the new government made a law, Life First. If an individual needed an organ or blood, it was to be given to them. A married pregnant woman is held in the highest regard because she is the giver of life. Children are told through statistics when they should or shouldn’t sacrifice to save others. The citizens have to give blood every two years to maintain a steady blood supply as well as have their blood type logged into a data base if someone was ill or in need of a donation. Kelsey Reed, a woman in her early 20s is marked for a kidney extraction surgery for a man who is in need of one and she seems to be the only match. In the days leading up to the surgery, she stays with her Father, a lead gubernatorial candidate and sitting state senator. The night before the appointment, she makes an attempt to flee with the help of her boyfriend Luke and the man who witnessed her pregnant mother’s death, Dr. Grant. The attempt fails and Kelsey is sent to a holding facility until her trail. There it is revealed she is pregnant and wouldn’t have been able to have the surgery done if she had gone to the appointment. If she is found guilty, not only will her baby will be stripped from her and given to another family but she will also be sentenced to death through donation. Her uterus will be removed and she will be sent to a long term holding until she is matched with someone who is in need of any kind of vital organ. With the help of her father, Luke, Dr. Grand and her Uncle Albert, Kelsey hopes to avoid a guilty verdict.  If not, they will have to put their risky escape plan in motion.

   Life First is a different outlook on the future of a society after an apocalypse claims billions of lives. Rather than focus on the first year or so after the outbreak, RJ Crayton takes the story a century into the future. The prospect of the government taking on a law like Life First after the pandemic is very believable. The author did a fantastic job of making this novel as realistic as possible, that is, until the tail end. I try not to give parts of the ending away but this is a scene that I have to address. If you plan on reading Life First for yourself, stop reading this now. In the last handful of chapters, Kelsey and Luke make a daring escape from the short-term holding facility. They make their way to Kelsey’s apartment. There, Luke invited their small group of family and friends to witness a small wedding ceremony. Kelsey and Luke apparently had enough time to change into a Tux as well as a white dress. This scene seemed so unrealistic and the whole time I’m thinking, “Shouldn’t they be on the run to Peoria?” Good thing this was not the very ending to the book or else that would have ruined it for me. Overall Life First is well written and for the most part, very convincing that something like what happened to Kelsey could very well happen to any one of us.


Until Next Time…

~Fiction-Book-Reviewer  

Friday, April 8, 2016

Update #41

   Up next for a review is Life First by RJ Crayton.  This book is the first of the Dystopian series and contains 262 pages of content. This novel is about a young woman living in a world where the apocalypse happened over a century ago and eighty percent of the population had perished. A new law was formed, Life First. This law stated that if one person is in need of an organ, the match for that donation would have no choice but to give it. Now, whether it was a vital organ or not, that depended on if you were being held in a long term holding facility. Death by donation instead of death by lethal injection. Kelsey Reed gets word she is to donate one of her kidneys and she decides to run. The punishment for denying a donation? Being brought to a short-term unit where it'll be decided if she'll be placed in long-term or set free. The review will be up on Tumblr as well as Blogger on April 22nd.

Until Next Time...
   ~Fiction-Book-Reviewer


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