Two families. Two very different situations. One uncertain outcome.
When a sudden, unexplained event collapses the systems modern life depends on, two families are forced onto the same road from opposite worlds.
In the rural town of Millersfell, the Collins family watches survival become more than food and shelter - trust turns fragile, neighbors are tested, and the choices made in the first desperate days shape everything that follows. When staying is no longer safe, they pull together with others and leave the only way they can: in a convoy, moving as one, betting that there is safety in numbers on roads no one can trust.
Hundreds of miles away in the dying sprawl of Chicago, Marco Sovic and his family watch a city of millions begin to starve and fracture. With no help coming and order breaking down street by street, they abandon everything they own and flee south as a family - through roadblocks, checkpoints, and strangers whose intentions cannot be known until it is too late.
Separated by hundreds of miles and worlds of difference, their paths bend toward each other. When they finally meet, two families become one - pooling what little they have and pressing on together, discovering that the people beside you are the only thing standing between survival and the dark.
Every decision they face - when to stay and when to run, how to find water, shelter, and safety on a collapsing road - is drawn from the hard-won lessons of the Survival Human field manuals. This is what those lessons look like when the lights go out for real.
Gripping, grounded, and unsettlingly plausible, Survival Human: The Event is post-collapse fiction written by someone who has seen disaster up close. It trades comic-book apocalypse for something far more frightening: a portrait of how quickly an ordinary country comes apart, and how ordinary families fight to hold on to each other when everything else is stripped away.
This is not a story about heroes with all the answers. It is a story about parents, neighbors, and children making impossible choices with no time to think - and discovering, the hard way, what they are truly made of.
When the lights go out, there are only two kinds of people: the ones who prepared to survive, and the ones who assumed someone else would save them. The Event asks the only question that will matter: which one are you?