Review of The Accelerates: Forty Days to Dust
Posted: 29 May 2025, 14:37
[Following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of "The Accelerates: Forty Days to Dust" by Tak Salmastyan.]
The world is quiet and dead, with just a few human survivors left at their peril, frightened and anxious with no idea when death might knock on their doorsteps as they run from being hunted. Hunted by little creatures who were once human, these little kids ought to be protected and cared for, but the virus has taken their innocence and created monsters in them. Who seek delight in devouring other people. The virus has altered their DNA and made them mutants, giving them weird physical features and accelerating their growth. A one-year-old becomes five years old as they keep growing by the minute. They were called Accelerates. In this dead world lie two brothers, Ethan, a fourteen-year-old kid, and Leo, a one-year-old child trapped in the body of a five-year-old, an anomaly, a defect, some would say. How would these two kids, who have nothing but each other in a world that has taken everything from them and still hunts them, survive? Find out by reading this gripping story.
The Accelerates: Forty Days to Dust by Tak Salmastyan is an apocalypse story that features themes of greed, loss, power, survival, love, and hope. This is an exciting story that would draw readers in and take them on an emotional journey. The book made me tense and anxious as I held my breath, watching in my mind’s eye the peril these characters go through. The story shows how the world ended as a result of greed by those in corporate power who wanted to enrich their pockets rather than save the world. Instead of using a cure to fight cancer, they changed it to create hormone-based infertility drugs. These drugs allowed parents to choose how they wanted their children to look by changing their DNA. Unfortunately, things didn't go as planned when the drugs turned into a virus and changed children in dangerous ways. GeneCorp is the company behind it all. Their greed caused the virus, GeneCorp Virus-40-DZX, to become airborne and spread to all and sundry, which brought about the apocalypse.
What I enjoyed most in this fascinating story is the author’s creativity in building the characters. The characters were well-developed. My favourite character is Ethan. With no one to look after him and his brother, he toughened up quickly and tried to shield his brother from every danger, even though he was still just a kid himself. I could hear my heart pounding loudly whenever they faced the Accelerates. Every fight and action felt real to me, and I wished I could jump into the scene and offer them help. Another favourite character of mine is Mia; she is a brave twelve-year-old who can hold her own and also tries to protect her big sister, Cara, not just from outside danger but also from her inner pain and struggles. These characters' will to survive and make sacrifices against all odds stacked against them was heart-wrenching and admirable.
I didn’t find any negative aspects about the book. This is an intriguing story that leaves one feeling emotional after reaching the last page. The author’s poetic writing style is beautifully done; readers would feel the raw emotion dripping from every word in the book. The book is also excellently well-edited. The writing was well polished; thus, I didn’t notice an error. As a result, I rate this story five out of five stars. I would recommend this book to lovers of science fiction. This was a touching story about love, hope, and the resilience of the human spirit.
******
The Accelerates: Forty Days to Dust
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon
The world is quiet and dead, with just a few human survivors left at their peril, frightened and anxious with no idea when death might knock on their doorsteps as they run from being hunted. Hunted by little creatures who were once human, these little kids ought to be protected and cared for, but the virus has taken their innocence and created monsters in them. Who seek delight in devouring other people. The virus has altered their DNA and made them mutants, giving them weird physical features and accelerating their growth. A one-year-old becomes five years old as they keep growing by the minute. They were called Accelerates. In this dead world lie two brothers, Ethan, a fourteen-year-old kid, and Leo, a one-year-old child trapped in the body of a five-year-old, an anomaly, a defect, some would say. How would these two kids, who have nothing but each other in a world that has taken everything from them and still hunts them, survive? Find out by reading this gripping story.
The Accelerates: Forty Days to Dust by Tak Salmastyan is an apocalypse story that features themes of greed, loss, power, survival, love, and hope. This is an exciting story that would draw readers in and take them on an emotional journey. The book made me tense and anxious as I held my breath, watching in my mind’s eye the peril these characters go through. The story shows how the world ended as a result of greed by those in corporate power who wanted to enrich their pockets rather than save the world. Instead of using a cure to fight cancer, they changed it to create hormone-based infertility drugs. These drugs allowed parents to choose how they wanted their children to look by changing their DNA. Unfortunately, things didn't go as planned when the drugs turned into a virus and changed children in dangerous ways. GeneCorp is the company behind it all. Their greed caused the virus, GeneCorp Virus-40-DZX, to become airborne and spread to all and sundry, which brought about the apocalypse.
What I enjoyed most in this fascinating story is the author’s creativity in building the characters. The characters were well-developed. My favourite character is Ethan. With no one to look after him and his brother, he toughened up quickly and tried to shield his brother from every danger, even though he was still just a kid himself. I could hear my heart pounding loudly whenever they faced the Accelerates. Every fight and action felt real to me, and I wished I could jump into the scene and offer them help. Another favourite character of mine is Mia; she is a brave twelve-year-old who can hold her own and also tries to protect her big sister, Cara, not just from outside danger but also from her inner pain and struggles. These characters' will to survive and make sacrifices against all odds stacked against them was heart-wrenching and admirable.
I didn’t find any negative aspects about the book. This is an intriguing story that leaves one feeling emotional after reaching the last page. The author’s poetic writing style is beautifully done; readers would feel the raw emotion dripping from every word in the book. The book is also excellently well-edited. The writing was well polished; thus, I didn’t notice an error. As a result, I rate this story five out of five stars. I would recommend this book to lovers of science fiction. This was a touching story about love, hope, and the resilience of the human spirit.
******
The Accelerates: Forty Days to Dust
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon