Keep Close
Posted by Literary Titan

Kristen Wade’s Keep Close is a tense, family-centered survival novel set after red meteorites strike Earth and unleash creatures that hunt people who are isolated. The book follows Ren Haley and her siblings after a sailing trip goes terribly wrong, while also tracking Lee, a young man in Oregon, trying to keep his own family alive as society breaks down around him. From the opening idea that “The yearning to protect those we love is the most noble virtue we all have in common,” the story makes its priorities clear: this is an apocalypse novel built around loyalty, grief, fear, and the stubborn pull of family.
Ren is the emotional center of the book, and her journey gives the danger real weight. She’s carrying guilt over her father’s death, distance from her siblings, and a sharp sense that she’s failed the people she loves. Being stranded at sea, rescued under suspicious circumstances, and then forced across a devastated Pacific Northwest doesn’t magically fix her, but it does push her into action. Her relationship with Peter and Lizzie is especially strong because it’s messy in a believable way. They snap, retreat, protect each other, and keep going.
The novel’s creature concept is simple but effective: survival depends on staying physically close. That idea turns the title into both a rule and an emotional demand. When Hank tells Ren, “I’ll keep close to both of you,” it lands as more than a promise to follow the rules of this new world. It’s also a promise of care, and the book keeps returning to that kind of protection in different forms. Parents, siblings, strangers, and even flawed people like Lee are all measured by what they’re willing to do for those they love.
Wade keeps the story moving with short chapters, shifting points of view, and plenty of immediate danger. The sea survival scenes feel harsh and claustrophobic, while the overland journey brings in new threats from both the creatures and desperate people. Lee’s storyline adds a strong moral pressure to the book because his choices are often wrong, but they come from a recognizable place: fear for a sick little sister and the old burden of family obligation. That makes the conflict feel less like good people versus bad people and more like people being squeezed until their worst and best instincts come out.
Keep Close is a fast-paced and emotional survival story about how people hold on to each other when the world stops being safe. It has action, creature horror, family drama, and a touch of romance, but its strongest moments come from the smaller acts of care: sharing food, tying ropes, carrying children, forgiving old wounds, and choosing not to let fear decide everything. By the end, the book feels like the first part of a larger story, but it also gives Ren and her family a satisfying emotional arc. It’s the kind of apocalypse novel that’s most interested in what people reach for when everything else falls away.
Pages: 395 | ASIN : B0DV9G8JXG

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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on June 16, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, bookblogger, books, books to read, bookshelf, ebook, goodreads, indie author, Keep Close, kindle, kobo, Kristen Wade, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Teen & Young Adult Fiction about Emotions & Feelings, Teen & Young Adult Literary Fiction, Teen & Young Adult Science Fiction Action & Adventure, Teen and YA, writer, writing, YA. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.




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