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Fierce Kingdom: A Novel Kindle Edition
After school on a late October day, Joan has taken her four-year-old son, Lincoln, to one of his favourite places on earth: the zoo. Just before closing time, as they need to go home, she hears some loud pops like firecrackers. Not thinking much of it, they head for the exit...until Joan realizes the eerie human emptiness means danger, then sees the figure of a lone gunman. Without another thought, she scoops up her son and runs back into the zoo. And for the next three hours--the entire scope of the novel--she does anything she can to keep Lincoln safe.
Both pulse-pounding and emotionally satisfying, Fierce Kingdom is a thrill ride, but also an exploration of the very nature of motherhood itself, from its saving graces to its savage power. At heart it asks how you draw the line between survival and the duty to protect one another? Who would you die for?
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House Canada
- Publication dateJuly 4, 2017
- File size1.4 MB
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Phillips’s latest is expertly structured to maximize tension and emotional impact. . . . [Her] characters are exquisitely rendered, her prose is artful and evocative. . . . Poignant and profound, this adrenaline-fueled thriller will shatter readers like a bullet through bone.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Panic-inducingly gripping. . . . This is the sort of book that, by virtue of its horrific premise, is impossible to put down until its resolution. . . . A page-turning, adrenaline-soaked read—an eloquent and meditative insight into motherhood and what it means, its many small trials and joys and wonders. . . . With deft, careful memories and observations, Phillips brings this ordinary—and wonderful in his ordinariness—four-year-old to life. . . . Here the challenge is pure survival, and it’s one hell of a ride watching these characters try to make it.” —The Guardian
“This is an elegant, taut and tense survival story that explores the boundaries of parental love. By pitting love against fear, Gin Phillips questions the opposing forces of family bonds and shows how fierce one mother’s love can be.” —Claire Cameron, author of The Last Neanderthal and The Bear
“I was absolutely captivated by this book. So, so tense, but wonderfully written. The perfect book.” —Gillian McAllister, author of Everything but the Truth
“Unbearably tense and yet beautifully written, Fierce Kingdom demands to be read in one sitting. After finishing, I pulled my loved ones a little closer.” —Paula Daly, author of The Mistake I Made
“Taut, tense and moving.” —Chris Ewan, author of Safe House
“It tore at every maternal fiber in my body. I couldn’t put it down.” —Fiona Barton, New York Times bestselling author of The Widow
“Fierce Kingdom is a bold exploration of the ferocity of a mother’s love. Riveting and beautiful, and all too real, you’ll find yourself asking, what would I do? It’s brilliant.” —Shari Lapena, author of The Couple Next Door
“I devoured it in one breathless sitting. Outstanding.” —Clare Mackintosh, author of I Let You Go
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
For a long while Joan has managed to balance on the balls of her bare feet, knees bent, skirt skimming the dirt. But now her thighs are giving out, so she puts a hand down and eases onto the sand.
Something jabs at her hip bone. She reaches underneath her leg and fishes out a small plastic spear-no longer than a finger-and it is no surprise, because she is always finding tiny weapons in unexpected places.
"Did you lose a spear?" she asks. "Or is this one a scepter?"
Lincoln does not answer her, although he takes the piece of plastic from her open hand. He apparently has been waiting for her lap to become available-he backs up, settling himself comfortably on her thighs, not a speck of sand on him. He has a fastidiousness about him; he never did like finger painting.
"Do you want a nose, Mommy?" he asks.
"I have a nose," she says.
"Do you want an extra one?"
"Who wouldn't?"
His dark curls need to be cut again, and he swipes them off his forehead. The leaves float down around them. The wooden roof, propped up on rough, round timber, shades them completely, but beyond it, the gray gravel is patterned with sunlight and shadows, shifting as the wind blows through the trees.
"Where are you getting these extra noses?" she asks.
"The nose store."
She laughs, settling back on her hands, giving in to the feel of the clinging dirt. She flicks a few wettish grains from under her fingernails. The Dinosaur Discovery Pit is always damp and cold, never touched by the sun, but despite the sand on her skirt and the leaves stuck to her sweater, this is perhaps her favorite part of the zoo-off the main paths, past the merry-go-round and the petting barn and the rooster cages, back through the weedy, wooded area labeled only woodlands. It is mostly trees and rocks and a few lonely animals back here along the narrow gravel paths: There is a vulture that lives in a pen with, for some reason, a rusted-out pickup truck. An owl that glares at a hanging chew toy. Wild turkeys that are always sitting, unmoving; she is not positive that they actually have legs. She imagines some cruel hunter's prank, some sweat-stained necklace strung with turkey feet.
She likes the haphazard strangeness of these woods, which are always shifting into some halfhearted try at an actual attraction. Currently a zip line is strung through the trees, although she never sees anyone zip-lining. She remembers animatronic dinosaurs here a couple of years earlier, and once there was a haunted ghost trail. There are hints at more distant incarnations: large boulders that she assumes are real but possibly are not, plus split-log fences and a pioneer cabin. No obvious purpose to any of it. Empty cement pools might have been watering holes for large mammals. There are occasional efforts at a nature trail, random signage that makes a walk feel less anchored rather than more-one tree labeled sassafras while the twenty trees around it go nameless.
"Now, let me tell you something," Lincoln begins, his hand landing on her knee. "Do you know what Odin could use?"
She does, in fact, know a great deal about Norse gods lately.
"An eye store?" she says.
"Yes, actually. Because then he could stop wearing his eye patch."
"Unless he likes his eye patch."
"Unless that," Lincoln agrees.
The sand around them is scattered with small plastic heroes and villains-Thor and Loki; Captain America, Green Lantern, and Iron Man. Everything comes back to superheroes lately. Pretend skeletons lurk beneath them in this sand pit-the vertebrae of some extinct animal protrude from the sand behind them, and there is a bucket of worn-down paintbrushes for brushing off the sand. She and Lincoln used to come here and dig for dinosaur bones, back in his former life as a three-year-old. But now, two months after his fourth birthday, he is several incarnations past his old archaeologist self.
The dinosaur pit is currently the Isle of Silence, the prison where Loki, Thor's trickster brother, has been imprisoned, and-when questions of extra noses don't arise-the air has been echoing with the sounds of an epic battle as Thor tries to make Loki confess to creating a fire demon.
Lincoln leans forward, and his epic resumes.
"The vile villain cackled," Lincoln narrates. "But then Thor had an idea!"
He calls them his stories, and they can last for hours if she lets them. She prefers the ones where he invents his own characters. He's concocted a villain named Horse Man, who turns people into horses. His nemesis is Horse Von, who turns those horses back into people. A vicious cycle.
Joan is half-aware of Lincoln's voice changing tones and inflections as he takes his different characters through their paces. But she is pleasantly drifting. In the mornings these paths would be crowded with strollers and mothers in yoga pants, but by late afternoon most visitors have cleared out. She and Lincoln come here sometimes after she picks him up from school-they alternate between the zoo and the library and the parks and the science museum-and she steers him to the woods when she can. Here there are crickets, or something that sounds like crickets, and birds calling and leaves rustling but no human sounds except for Lincoln calling out his dialogue. He has absorbed the patter of superhero talk, and he can regurgitate it and make it his own.
"There was a secret weapon on his belt!"
"His evil plan had failed!"
He is vibrating with excitement. Every part of him is shaking, from the balls of his feet to his chuffy fists. Thor bobs through the air, and Lincoln bounces, and she wonders if he loves the idea of good conquering evil or simply an exciting battle, and she wonders when she should start making it clear that there is a middle ground between good and evil that most people occupy, but he is so happy that she does not want to complicate things.
"Do you know what happens then, Mommy?" he asks. "After Thor punches him?"
"What?" she says.
She has perfected the art of being able to listen with half of herself while the other half spins and whirls.
"Loki has actually been mind-controlling Thor. And the punch makes him lose his powers!"
"Oh," she says. "And then what?"
"Thor saves the day!"
He keeps talking-"But there's a new villain in town, boys!"-as she curls and straightens her toes. She thinks.
She thinks that she still needs to come up with a wedding present for her friend Murray-there is that artist who does dog paintings, and one of those seems like a thoughtful choice, so she should send an e-mail and see about placing the order, although "order" is probably an insulting sort of word to an artist. She remembers that she meant to call her great-aunt this morning, and she thinks that maybe instead-she is solving problems left and right here, having a burst of mental efficiency as Loki gets buried in sand-maybe instead she will mail her great-aunt that hilarious paper bag monkey that Lincoln made in school. Surely the artwork is better than a phone call, although there's a certain selfishness to it, since she hates to talk on the phone, and, all right, it is a cop-out-she knows it-but she settles on the paper bag monkey regardless. She thinks of the squash dressing her great-aunt makes. She thinks of the leftover plantain chips in the kitchen cabinet. She thinks of Bruce Boxleitner. Back in junior high she was slightly obsessed with him in Scarecrow and Mrs. King, and she has discovered that the show is available in its entirety online, so she has been rewatching it, episode by episode-it holds up well for a 1980s show, with its Cold War spies and bad hair-and she can't remember whether Lee and Amanda finally kiss at the end of the second season or the third season, and she has six more episodes to go in the second season, but she could always skip to the third.
A woodpecker hammers somewhere nearby, and she is pulled back to here and now. She notices that the wart on Lincoln's hand is getting bigger. It looks like an anemone. There is that beautiful shifting of shadows on the gravel, and Lincoln is doing his evil villain laugh, and it strikes her that these afternoons with her son's weight on her legs, the woods around them, are something like euphoric.
Thor falls against her foot, his plastic head landing on her toe.
"Mommy?"
"Yes?"
"Why doesn't Thor wear his helmet in the movie?"
"I think it's harder to see with a helmet on."
"But doesn't he want his head protected?"
"I suppose sometimes he wears it and sometimes he doesn't. Depending on his mood."
"I think he should protect his head all the time," he says. "It's dangerous to battle without a helmet. Why do you think Captain America only wears a hood? It's not good protection, is it?"
Paul gets bored with this superhero chatter-her husband would much rather talk football formations and NBA lineups-but Joan doesn't mind it. She was once obsessed with Wonder Woman. Super Friends. The Incredible Hulk. Who would win in a fight, she once asked her uncle, Superman or the Incredible Hulk? He'd said, Well, if he was losing, Superman could always fly away, and she'd thought that a blindingly brilliant answer.
"Captain America has his shield," she tells Lincoln. "That's what he uses for protection."
"What if he can't get it over his head in time?"
"He's very fast."
"But still," he says, unconvinced.
"You know, you're right," she says, because he is. "He really should wear a helmet."
Some sort of man-made rock forms the back wall of the pit, beige and bulging, and a small animal is rooting around behind it. She hopes it is not a rat. She imagines a squirrel but makes a point not to turn her head.
She opens her purse to peer at her phone. "We probably need to start heading toward the gate in around five minutes," she says.
As he often does when she says it's time to stop playing, Lincoln acts as if she has not spoken at all.
"Does Dr. Doom always wear a mask?" he asks.
"Did you hear me?" she asks.
"Yes."
"What did I say?"
"That we're about to leave."
"Okay," she says. "Yes, Dr. Doom always wears a mask. Because of his scars."
"Scars?"
"Yeah, the scars he got in the lab experiment."
"Why would he wear a mask because of them?"
"Because he wants to cover them up," she says. "He thinks they're ugly."
"Why would he think they're ugly?"
She watches a bright orange leaf land. "Well, they made him look different," she says. "Sometimes people don't want to look different."
"I don't think scars are ugly."
As he's speaking, a sharp, loud sound carries through the woods. Two cracks, then several more. Pops, like balloons bursting. Or fireworks. She tries to imagine what anyone could be doing in a zoo that would sound like small explosions. Something related to the Halloween festivities? They've strung up lights all over the place-not here in the Woodlands but all over the more popular pathways-so maybe a transformer blew? Is there construction going on, a jackhammer?
There is another bang. Another and another. It sounds too loud to be balloons, too infrequent to be a jackhammer.
The birds are silent, but the leaves keep skittering down.
Lincoln is unbothered.
"Could I use my Batman for Dr. Doom?" he asks. "He wears black. And if I use him, can you make him the right kind of mask?"
"Sure," she says.
"What will you make it with?"
"Tinfoil," she suggests.
A squirrel scrabbles across the roof of the dirt pit, and she hears the soft whoosh of its impact when it leaps to a tree.
"And what will we use for the scarves?" Lincoln asks.
She looks down at him.
"Scarves?" she repeats.
He nods. She nods back, considering and replaying. She gives herself over to deciphering the workings of his brain: it is one of the bits of mothering that has delighted her all the more because she did not know it existed. His mind is complicated and unique, weaving worlds of its own. In his sleep sometimes he will cry out entire sentences-"Not down the stairs!"-and there are windows to his inner machinery, glimpses, but she will never really know it all, and that is the thrill. He is a whole separate being, as real as she is.
Scarves. She works the puzzle of it.
"Do you mean the scarves on his face?" she asks.
"Yes. The ones he thinks are ugly."
She laughs. "Oh. I was saying 'scars'-you know, like the one on Daddy's arm where the water burned him when he was little? Or the one on my knee from when I fell down?"
"Oh," he says, sheepish. He laughs, too. He is quick to get a joke. "Scars, not scarves. So he doesn't think scarves are ugly?"
"I don't really know how Dr. Doom feels about scarves," she says.
"He doesn't have them on his face."
"No. Those are scars."
She listens, half considering whether she could have handled the idea of scars more tactfully, half wondering about gunshots. But they could not have been gunshots. And if they had been, she would have heard something else by now. Screams or sirens or a voice coming over a loudspeaker making some kind of announcement.
There is nothing.
She has been watching too many battles.
She checks her phone. They only have a few minutes until the zoo closes, and it is entirely possible that they might be overlooked back here in the woods. She has imagined the scenario more than once: camping in the zoo overnight, maybe even intentionally hiding back here, going to visit the animals in the pitch-black of midnight-children's books are written about such situations. It's ridiculous, of course, because there surely would be security guards. Not that she has ever noticed a security guard here.
They should get moving.
Product details
- ASIN : B01NAW2QC8
- Publisher : Random House Canada
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : July 4, 2017
- Language : English
- File size : 1.4 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 285 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-0735273207
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #5,300,090 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1,285 in Women's Crime Fiction
- #2,897 in Mystery, Thriller & Suspense Literary Fiction
- #3,012 in Mothers & Children Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Gin Phillips has written six novels, and her work has been sold in 29 countries.
Her debut novel, The Well and the Mine, won the 2009 Barnes & Noble Discover Award. Her novel Fierce Kingdom was named one of the Best Crime Novels of 2017 by the New York Times Book Review. It was also named one of the best books of the year by NPR, Publishers Weekly, Amazon, and Kirkus Reviews. A Kirkus starred review called it “poignant and profound,” adding that "this adrenaline-fueled thriller will shatter readers like a bullet through bone.” The New York Times called the novel “expertly made…clever and irresistible,” noting that “Phillips…beautifully captures the quirks, tedium and magic of parenting a young child.”
Gin’s novels also have been named as selections for Indie Next, Book of the Month, and the Junior Library Guild.
Born in Montgomery, Al., Gin graduated from Birmingham-Southern College with a degree in political journalism. After time spent in Ireland, New York, and Washington, D.C., she currently lives with her family (plus a schnoodle and a mini golden mountain doodle) in Birmingham.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book engaging, with one review noting it reads like an uninterrupted action sequence, and many mentioning it's a quick summer read that grabs attention from the beginning. The writing quality receives positive feedback, with one reader highlighting the brilliant third-person narration. Customers appreciate the mother-son relationship and the realistic portrayal of motherhood, with one review describing how it captures the ferocity of motherhood. While some find the story very suspenseful, others express frustration with the ending. The character development receives mixed reactions, with some finding the characters believable while others say they weren't well-developed.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a great exciting read that they couldn't put down, particularly noting it's perfect for a quick fun summer read.
"...Thank you for this awesome read!!!!" Read more
"...for a high-stakes, edge-of-your-seat thriller, Fierce Kingdom is worth a read." Read more
"...was scary and probably all too real, so overall, this is a very worthy read and one that will keep you up most of the night if you're as slow a..." Read more
"...The book sounded intriguing -- I am a mother too and was curious to see how the author worked those feelings into this work...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's pacing, finding it fast and easy to read, with one customer noting it reads like an uninterrupted action sequence.
"...Three hours of pure adrenaline follow as Joan relies on instinct, quick thinking, and her deep knowledge of the zoo to stay one step ahead of the..." Read more
"...spend a bit too much time hiding in one spot, it reads like an uninterrupted action sequence...." Read more
"...I was really looking forward to this book but feel misled. It is not fast paced. If you've read the Kindle sample that is the tone of the book...." Read more
"Oh wow. This is a really quick and easy read, really engaging and reflective of ongoing issues inside of the US...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, finding it well-crafted and easy to read, with one customer particularly appreciating the third-person narration.
"...cruel, but taken in the context of protecting her son, they seem perfectly legitimate and what any mother might have done...." Read more
"...A very tough ending, but an awesome well-written book...." Read more
"...It is very much an internal monologue by the mother. Her thoughts are odd to me...." Read more
"...There are some neat twists in the writing and the action sequences that work well...." Read more
Customers appreciate the mother-son relationship in the book and its accurate depiction of the ferocity of motherhood.
"...He is so bright, so loving, such a real little person that the reader wants him to survive just as much as his mother." Read more
"...It's a suspense novel with the main plot about a mother protecting her child, and boy does she protect her child...." Read more
"...of motherhood, as Joan struggles to keep Lincoln alive and psychologically intact, trying to protect him from the terror around them; and there are..." Read more
"...very heartfelt book for mother’s out there, it really calls on multiple aspects of motherhood as a whole...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's focus, with several noting it grabs attention from the beginning, while one customer mentions being completely immersed in the story.
"...There is an incredible focus in this book that works very well. Just like the characters, the reader feels cut off from the rest of the world...." Read more
"I had completely immersed myself in this book. I could feel the love this mother has for her son...." Read more
"...I loved it and thought it was a real page turner and that it focused on an issue that is truly relevant in our society today, mass shootings...." Read more
"Very fast moving book that grabbed my attention at the very beginning. Fast read, great story line but Horrible ending." Read more
Customers describe the book as a page turner, with one customer noting they were racing through the pages.
"Animal Kingdom is a page-turner; the tension is practically nonstop...." Read more
"...I loved it and thought it was a real page turner and that it focused on an issue that is truly relevant in our society today, mass shootings...." Read more
"...desperate situation of the protagonist and her young son, it is a real page turner...." Read more
"This was a page turner. I enjoyed this fast and easy read. It's mostly well written and brings out a few interesting moral questions." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the book's suspenseful story, with some finding it very intense and drawing them in, while others express frustration with the ending and feel it was abrupt.
"...This book is intense. The pacing makes you feel like you’re right there with Joan, hiding behind enclosures and second-guessing every move...." Read more
"...Overall,the action is the most effective action writing I've read since Hunger Games; after a slightly slow start, when Joan and Lincoln spend a bit..." Read more
"...I can see this being a very heartfelt book for mother’s out there, it really calls on multiple aspects of motherhood as a whole...." Read more
"...The mind of the shooters was scary and probably all too real, so overall, this is a very worthy read and one that will keep you up most of the night..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book, with some finding them believable while others say they were not well-developed.
"...He is so bright, so loving, such a real little person that the reader wants him to survive just as much as his mother." Read more
"This is the most intense book I have ever read. The heroine is portrayed as all too human and, at times, inhuman!..." Read more
"...Both mother and son were well -developed characters , as were others whom they encountered during their flight from armed killers...." Read more
"...I did like the mother-son relationship, and the characters were believable...." Read more
Reviews with images

Fierce Kingdom has it all - page-turning plot, authentic characters, and lovely writing
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2017I listened to this book on audible. As the caption says, I looked down on my phone at how much time I had left in the book, and without spoilers, let's just say I was shocked to see that I had only 42 seconds left. I don't think I can recall a book in recent memory that has kept me riveted to the very last sentences. I connected with this book on many levels -- in fairness I had just finished reading a very famous female writer's book -- actually her memoir of sorts. Without naming names and being mean, this middle aged and learned author was sharing her life's wisdom, and discussed in detail the deep love she had for her dog and her unceasing devotion and care for it, disclosing that she never wanted children, but only a dog. The problem was NOT that she loved her dog, or never wanted to be a parent. Totally get that of course. The problem was an unwitting, chilling kind of disdain for and disconnect with children that oozed out of the pages. Enter Fierce Kingdom, where the opposite happened. Phillips is wise without having to convince us she is. I was so happy -- maybe happy is not the right word -- but more of a YES! now THIS is an author who has no agenda -- not trying to prove anything to anyone with writing dexterity or in this case the virtues of BEING a mother. She simply was able to tap directly into raw primal emotions and the decisions that might result, and put them down on paper for us to all consider. If you want to FEEL down to your core like a mother bear whose child has been threatened -- - and wonder how you might react -- this is about as good as it gets.
I've heard there is a movie on the way -- I don't know how it could compare to the book but I'll be there in the theatre to watch it.
Thank you for this awesome read!!!!
- Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2025If you’re looking for a book that will get your heart racing and your palms sweating, Fierce Kingdom delivers. From the very first pages, it throws you straight into a high-stakes survival scenario - Joan and her four-year-old son, Lincoln, are trapped in a zoo after closing time, with active shooters on the loose. Three hours of pure adrenaline follow as Joan relies on instinct, quick thinking, and her deep knowledge of the zoo to stay one step ahead of the danger.
This book is intense. The pacing makes you feel like you’re right there with Joan, hiding behind enclosures and second-guessing every move. The author does a great job of capturing the sheer terror and desperation of a mother trying to protect her child. That said, it’s also a stressful read—there’s little room to breathe, and the constant tension might be overwhelming for some.
Which leads to the following trigger warning: gun violence. It’s a central theme, and some moments feel almost "too" real.
My only complaint is that the ending felt a bit rushed. After all that tension, the resolution comes a little too fast and leaves a few loose ends hanging. Still, if you’re in the mood for a high-stakes, edge-of-your-seat thriller, Fierce Kingdom is worth a read.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2024Betcha they make a TV movie of this one. Wasn't thrilled, maybe the movie would be better.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 6, 2017Animal Kingdom is a page-turner; the tension is practically nonstop. However, it is also a study in motherhood and the lengths to which a mother might go to protect her child. The narration shifts a few times to one of the perpetrators, and his characterization is either stereotyped or a commentary on the times in which we live because this kind of behavior can be a stereotype. A relatively small portion of the book turns the plot when one of the shooters recognizes one of his elementary school teachers. Interesting that this teacher thinks she might still be able to "save" him. Of all the characters, the four-year-old son is the most amazing. He is so bright, so loving, such a real little person that the reader wants him to survive just as much as his mother.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2017There are so many things to love about this book, so I'll start with the good things. It's a suspense novel with the main plot about a mother protecting her child, and boy does she protect her child. Joan takes her four year old son to the zoo every week, and to the library and other places, but the zoo in definitely a high point--until it's not. Nestled in the woods of the zoo, resting, Joan hears what she thinks are fireworks going off, and as she gatheres her young son up to leave the zoo, she finds out that it's not fireworks, but gun fire. Now Joan must hide in a place she knows well, from whoever is shooting both humans and beasts in one of the safest places on earth, the zoo.
The author must have children because she writes about the mother-child bond with such authority, and compassion. I felt as if I were there with this mother, ready to 'splatter brains on pavement' to protect her son. The portrayal of at this mother is spot-on. Hearing her listen to her son's chatter is priceless, as it is to the character who loves this young boy.
The tension never lets up as Joan must make decisions that might seem cruel, but taken in the context of protecting her son, they seem perfectly legitimate and what any mother might have done.
I was a little disappointed that the book ended so abrutly and left out the fate of some of the other visitors to the zoo. The mind of the shooters was scary and probably all too real, so overall, this is a very worthy read and one that will keep you up most of the night if you're as slow a reader as I am.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2017I ordered this book after hearing an interview with Ms. Phillips on NPR. The book sounded intriguing -- I am a mother too and was curious to see how the author worked those feelings into this work. Well, I started reading immediately upon receiving it. Unfortunately, it made me stay up late, get up early, and be late to work! I haven't read such a true "page turner" in a very long time. The treatment of Joan's feelings as the mother was spot-on. I figured Ms. Phillips would do a great job when she said during her interview that she didn't write a "Die Hard in the Zoo" sort of book. Awesome!!! Wish the stars went up to 11!
Top reviews from other countries
- Read, Watch & Drink CoffeeReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 6, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars A powerful story that is paced perfectly.
Fierce is a powerfully captivating story with an intriguing premise that’s sure to have you gripped from page one.
I love books that explore the lengths a parent will go to to protect their child, but also the difficulties of teaching them the balance between what’s right and wrong. And with many obstacles along the way, you can constantly feel Joan’s inner struggle of what’s the right thing to do with what will get them out alive.
There’s a line at the start of the book that really struck me:
“Such a system of clocks and balances – parenting – of projections and guesswork and cost-benefit ratios.”
From this point on, I was fully immersed in Joan’s situation. I often visit the zoo with my boys so I could really picture the setting and atmosphere, and I loved the interactions with the different animals, adding even more threat with their nervous presence. And Phillips writes it so well that you really feel like you’re trapped there with her.
It’s such a powerful story and, told over a few hours, is paced perfectly. I easily read it in one sitting as I had to know how it would end. There are a few things left unanswered, but the climactic end is sure to leave you breathless. Now I’m off to see what else Gin Phillips has written!
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Canada on May 17, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Good read
Read it in one sitting !
- D. BeecherReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 23, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars Page turning thriller.
There are some very good moments in this book, in fact I really loved the first half of the novel. That energy and engagement was enough to see me through to the end of the book...but then you start thinking back and remembering some of the heavy handed moralising moments, some loose ends and some times where your suspension of disbelief rubbed thin.
One of the blurbs compare it to Room and I do think there is a valid comparison there. However, Room had a keychange in it. You had the section in the room and then you had the consequences of freedom. Where as there is no keychange in Fierce. I think the flaws come from extending a good idea past it's limits in order to extend it to a novel and part of me would have loved if it had been kept as a novella. Nevertheless it is a very good page turning thriller that I think many people would enjoy. I quite happily read it in one sitting.
Nevertheless it is definitely worth a read.
- old crowReviewed in Canada on August 4, 2017
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
good, easy summer read
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FroschköniginReviewed in Germany on December 18, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars Wenn das Unvorstellbare eintritt
Der Nachmittag verläuft harmonisch und friedlich. Wie so oft ist Joan mit ihrem Sohn Lincoln in den Zoo gegangen. Nicht nur wegen der Tiere, auch, weil der Vierjährige, abseits der Hauptwege, so ruhig und zufrieden spielen kann. Haarsträubende Abenteuer der nordischen Götter Thor und Loki sind gerade angesagt, die Lincoln mit kleinen Actionfiguren nachspielt. Wie fast immer, müssen sich Mutter und Sohn auch heute beeilen, um rechtzeitig vor Toreschluss den Haupteingang zu erreichen.
Kurz vor dem Eingang sieht Joan mehr aus den Augenwinkeln, als sofort wirklich zu realisieren, was sie da sieht, mehrere Personen reglos am Boden liegen. Gleichzeitig wird einem Teil von ihr bewusst, dass die seltsamen Geräusche, die sie seit einiger Zeit von der Richtung des Haupteingangs her gehört hatte, keine Feuerwerkskörper waren oder zerplatzende Glühbirnen. Sondern Schüsse.
Von dem Moment an ist Joan gezwungen, rein nach Instinkt zu handeln und alle Überlegungen, die nicht unmittelbar dazu führen, ihren kleinen Sohn und sich selbst in Sicherheit zu bringen, auszublenden. Vorrang hat nur ihrer beider Überleben, und Joan muss erkennen, wie brüchig die Balance zwischen eigenem Überlebenswillen und Mitgefühl sein kann in Extremsituationen.
Es ist ein Szenario, von dem jeder weiß, dass er theoretisch selbst einmal davon ereilt werden kann: Bewaffnete dringen in einen gut besuchten, öffentlichen Bereich ein und eröffnen das Feuer. Gleichzeitig passsiert soetwas immer nur anderen, und wie man selbst sich in so einem Moment verhalten würde, kann wahrscheinlich niemand sagen, bevor diese furchtbare Situation wirklich eintritt.
Etwas ist anders als in den Szenarien, die Joan und alle anderen aus den Nachrichten kennen: statt der erwarteten Hundertschaften von Polizei und Hubschraubern bleibt die Szene gespentisch ruhig. Die Täter sind keine wild um sich schießenden Amokläufer. Sie sind gezielt auf der Jagd nach den Personen, die sich noch auf dem Zoogelände befinden, jeden einzelnen, den sie ausfindig machen können, und sie lassen sich bei der Inszenierung ihres irrsinnigen „Spiels“ viel Zeit.
Auch deshalb umgeht Gin Phillips in ihrem Roman das Problem, dass sich das alptraumhafte Szenario ungewollt zu einem Actionthriller entwickeln könnte. Statt ihre Protagonisten atemlos durch das Zoogelände hetzen zu lassen – das Cover ist da etwas irreführend – besteht für Joan und die anderen Gejagten die einzig mögliche Überlebenstrategie darin, möglichst unsichtbar und lautlos zu sein. Das ist zum Glück nicht spannend. Es lässt der Autorin genügend Raum, die humanen und emotionalen Facetten für die Protagonisten in einer solchen Extremsituation auszuleuchten, die das Geschehen für den Leser umso eindringlicher machen. Das ist aber zugleich extrem nervenzehrend. Wie erklärt man einem gerade einmal Vierjährigen, dass es überlebenwichig ist, sich mucksmäuschenstill zu verhalten. Lincoln versteht zwar, dass die Situation, in der seine Mutter und er sich befinden, gefährlich ist – aber das Problem ist: Gefahr, Lebensgefahr, ist für ihn noch ein abstrakter Begriff, der Unterschied zwischen der echten Bedrohung durch Menschen mit wirklichen Gewehren zu seinen gespielten Kämpfen mit den Actionfiguren ist dem Jungen noch nicht klar.
Die beklemmende Wirkung, die diese introspektive Perspektive hat, wird noch dadurch verstärkt, dass Phillips es versteht, den Leser, ob er will oder nicht, durch ihre Beschreibung der Szenerie direkt an den Ort des Geschehens zu versetzen - man sieht förmlich jeden Grashalm, jede Laterne, die den Pfad viel zu sehr erleuchtet, und jedes Schutz bietende Gebüsch vor sich.
Ein Buch, das mich den Atem anhalten ließ und das zutiefst menschlich ist. Und auch ein Buch, das einen über die fast alltägliche Instrumentalisierung von Gewalt- zu puren Unterhaltungszwecken – nachdenken lässt. Diese zieht sich nämich wie ein roter Faden durch das Buch: da sind die harmlosen – oder als harmlos empfundenen – Actionspielchen mit Lincolns kleinen Plastikmonstern, die sofort wieder aufstehen, nachdem er sie für tot erklärt hat. Da sind aber auch solche Filme wie „Predator“, den Lincoln (was ich nicht wirlich verstehe) sich mt seiner Mutter anschauen durfte. Da ist Joans jagdbegeisteter Vater mit einem Arsenal an Waffen, der mit Hingabe Tauben den Hals undreht. Da sind die zutiefst menschenverachtenden Killerfilme, die sich die Täter angeschaut haben. Gin Phillips vermeidet es, moralische Zeigefinger zu erheben und Überlegungen darüber anzustellen, ob Banalisierung oder Verherrlichung von Gewalt letztendlich Hemmschwellen senkt oder Gewaltbereitschaft fördet. Auf jeden Fall lässt „Fierce Kingdom“ den Leser nachdenklich zurück.