The Reading Bud

Book Blog by Heena Rathore-Pardeshi

Book Review: Salvation Reigned by Travis Peterson

Book Details:

Author: Travis Peterson
Release Date: 31 March 2026
Series:
Genre: Dystopian, Post-Aplocalypse, Sci-Fi
Format: E-book 
Pages: 120 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
A rogue planet is coming. Humanity’s last city has a plan. You won’t like it.
Pete wakes in POD 217 with blood on his face and no memory of yesterday. The Last Great City is clean, pleasurable, and perfectly controlled — as long as its citizens follow the cycle. Reset. Comply. Repeat.
Pete keeps failing the reset.
Somewhere in the city, a woman named Marla is looking for him. Somewhere in the past, two scientists just watched something enormous pass in front of Betelgeuse. And somewhere at the edge of a dying wasteland, a cybernaut older than civilization is sitting under a cherry tree, watching the feral descendants of humanity dance under a dying star.

Salvation Reigned moves across fractured time and colliding perspectives — the scientists who saw it coming, the city that chose control over truth, the lovers whose bond survives every attempt to erase it, and the machine left behind to witness what persists when everything else is gone.
Raw. Nonlinear. Uncompromising.
This is not a story about heroes. It is a story about what love, memory, and consciousness do when a system tries to delete them.
Adult content: extreme language and graphic violence.
For fans of Philip K. Dick, Chuck Palahniuk, and Jeff VanderMeer.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Salvation Reigned by Travis James Peterson is a strange, abrasive, darkly comic work of dystopian science fiction that reads like the end of the world filtered through panic, intoxication, political theatre, body horror, and cosmic absurdity. The novel begins with Pete, a scientist working on a singularity weapon to stop Nyx, a rogue planet on a collision course with Earth, but very quickly expands into something much wilder: a collapsing civilisation, performative leadership, feral evolution, cybernauts, strongholds, memory cycles, and the unsettling question of whether “saving humanity” means anything if humanity has already lost itself.

What immediately stands out is the book’s voice. It is raw, fragmented, profane, hallucinatory, and deliberately excessive. Author Peterson writes in short bursts that feel part fever dream, part stand-up routine, and part apocalypse sermon. This style will not be for everyone, but it gives the novel a distinctive pulse. The political satire is especially sharp in the early sections, where the President, his cabinet, and the media apparatus respond to planetary extinction with ego, spectacle, branding, and grotesque public performance. The discovery of Nyx by Gilbert and Lewis, followed by the government’s attempt to control the narrative, sets the tone beautifully: this is a world too stupid, vain, and overstimulated to face its own ending with dignity.

Thematically, the novel is surprisingly rich beneath its chaotic surface. It is deeply concerned with survival, control, memory, bodily autonomy, propaganda, technological salvation, and our recurring instinct to turn even catastrophe into hierarchy. That said, Salvation Reigned is not a smooth or conventionally polished read. Its intensity can become overwhelming, and the constant barrage of profanity, sexual imagery, violence, and surreal humour may exhaust some readers. The prose is intentionally jagged, but there are moments where that jaggedness blurs clarity. Readers looking for traditional pacing, clean exposition, or restrained dystopian storytelling may struggle with it. However, readers who enjoy experimental speculative fiction, satirical apocalypse narratives, and fiction that is willing to be ugly, funny, clever, and uncomfortable all at once may find this book fascinating.

Overall, Salvation Reigned is bold, chaotic, and extremely strange in a way that feels entirely intentional. It is not simply about stopping the apocalypse; it is about what people do when extinction becomes a certainty, and how every system (political, technological, spiritual, and biological) tries to claim the right to define survival. It is messy, provocative, and often grotesque, but it also has flashes of real beauty, especially in its final meditation on memory, destruction, and the life that continues after us.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads


Amazon


I love reading your comments, so please go ahead…

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

I’m Heena

Welcome to The Reading Bud, my cosy corner of the internet dedicated to all things books and authors. Here, I invite you to join me on a journey of discovering under-represented books, independent and small press authors, and all things book with a touch of love and loud purrs. Let’s get Reading!

May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Reading is like breathing to me.

Recent Posts

  • Author interview: Laricea Ioana Roman-Halliday

    Welcome to TRB Lounge. Today, I’d like to welcome author Laricea Ioana Roman-Halliday for an author interview with TRB-team! About The Author Laricea Ioana Roman-Halliday  Laricea Ioana Roman-Halliday is a business leader, marketer, mentor, public speaker and brand specialist who…

  • Excerpt Reveal: Brand Purpose – Less Unicorn, More Zebra? by Laricea Ioana Roman-Halliday

    Welcome to TRB Lounge. Today, I’d like to welcome author Laricea Ioana Roman-Halliday for sharing an excerpt from her latest release Brand Purpose – Less Unicorn, More Zebra? About the book Brand Purpose – Less Unicorn, More Zebra?…

  • Book Review: Forgive Us by E.T. Gunnarsson

    Author: E.T. GunnarssonRelease Date: 19th December 2020Genre: Science-Fiction, Dystopian, Post-Apocalyptic, Futuristic FictionSeries:Format: E-book Pages: 231 pagesPublisher: Bragi PressBlurb:Three timelines. One dark future…A new form of energy has poisoned the earth, leaving civilization in ruins. As decades go by, the inheritors of this devastation…

  • Book Spotlight: Brand Purpose – Less Unicorn, More Zebra? by Laricea Ioana Roman-Halliday

    Welcome to TRB Lounge. Today, we are featuring author Laricea Ioana Roman-Halliday for her novel Brand Purpose – Less Unicorn, More Zebra? Brand Purpose – Less Unicorn, More Zebra? Book: A Brand’s Purpose…Less Unicorn, More Zebra?Author:…

  • Author Interview: E. T. Gunnarsson

    Welcome to TRB Lounge! Today, we are featuring E. T. Gunnarsson, author of Forgive Us, for our Author Interview feature. About The Author E. T. Gunnarsson Mr. Gunnarsson grew up on a horse-rescue ranch in the…