The Pulse: A Novel of Surviving the Collapse of the Grid
The Pulse: A Novel of Surviving the Collapse of the Grid book cover

The Pulse: A Novel of Surviving the Collapse of the Grid

Paperback – December 9, 2020

Price
$14.95
Format
Paperback
Pages
400
Publisher
Ulysses Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1612430546
Dimensions
5.06 x 0.91 x 7.81 inches
Weight
12.7 ounces

Description

Bug Out|Scott|Williams|9781569757819|14.95|Ulysses Press|6/15/10|12000||Bug Out Vehicles and Shelters|Scott|Williams|9781569759790|14.95|Ulysses Press|10/11/11|||Getting Out Alive|Scott|Williams|9781569758731|14.95|Ulysses Press|3/1/11|400|| My favorite adventure stories have always been those that cast ordinary people into extraordinary circumstances and predicaments their previous lives could not possibly prepare them for.xa0 Although I sometimes enjoy reading works of fiction that involve larger than life characters with highly specialized training and superior fitness, skills and abilities, you won't find any fearless heroes of that kind in The Pulse. After experiencing first hand the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and living in the impact zone where the power grid was destroyed and stayed down for weeks, I often wondered what it would be like if that situation was much more widespread and long-lasting. If a solar flare or EMP attack took out electrical power and shut down most forms of communication and transportation in North America, the aftermath would be far worse than that of any hurricane and there would be no sudden influx of crews from neighboring states to work around the clock to rebuild the grid.xa0 Grocery stores would soon be stripped bare and no delivery trucks would be running to replenish their stocks.xa0 People would become desperate in short order, especially in large urban areas where the limited supplies available would be quickly consumed.xa0 Far lesser events have shown that such desperation quickly strips away the thin veneer of civilization that keeps complex societies in order. Violence would become rampant, and law enforcement agencies would be overwhelmed and unable to protect the citizens of their jurisdictions.xa0 Those who would survive such chaos would have to act on their own and act quickly to seek safe refuge.xa0 xa0 In The Pulse I chose to focus not on the technical aspects of the solar event or the subsequent rebuilding and reorganizing of civilization in the aftermath, but rather on the immediate concerns of two groups of characters.xa0 Casey Drager and her roommate, Jessica, are college students at Tulane University, in New Orleans.xa0 Casey's friend, Grant, an older graduate student who was living in the city after the devastation of Katrina, knows from experience that they have to get out and get out fast.xa0 Casey's father, who is especially close to his only daughter after the loss of her mother in a car accident years before, is away on a short sailing vacation in the Caribbean with his brother when the pulse strikes.xa0 Among islands a thousand miles from the U.S. mainland and suddenly cut off from all communication with his daughter, Artie is desperate to find out if she is okay. Like any father in such a predicament, Artie Drager will do everything in his power to find his daughter, but with no transportation back to North America faster than his brother's sailboat, he has no way of knowing if she will still be there when he finally reaches New Orleans.xa0 Obstacles and dangers await both parties as they deal with their situations as best they can; and everyone involved has to quickly adapt to the new reality of a world without the safety net of technology and organized society. Scott B. Williams is a sea kayaker, sailor, boat builder, and writer with a passion for exploring and outdoor adventures on land and sea. He has written seven non-fiction books prior to The Pulse, which is his first novel, and continues to write for magazines in addition to maintaining various blogs on boat building, sailing, and outdoor survival. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Survival in the United States is thrown into doubt when an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) destroys the power grid in this riveting thriller set in the sweltering and chaotic South.
  • The electric age comes to a sudden and violent end. As massive solar flares bombard the Earth, an intense electromagnetic pulse instantly destroys the power grid throughout North America. Within hours, desperate citizens panic and anarchy descends. Surrounded by chaos, Casey Drager, a student at Tulane University, must save herself from the havoc in the streets of New Orleans. Casey and two of her friends bug out to the dangerous backwaters of Mississippi where they are forced to use their survival skills to seek refuge and fight for their lives.Meanwhile, thousands of miles away, Casey’s father, Artie, finds himself cut off and stranded. His Caribbean sailing vacation has turned into every parent’s nightmare. Warding off pirates and tackling storms, Artie uses the stars to guide him toward his daughter.
  • The Pulse
  • is a compelling action-adventure novel that reveals what it would take to survive in a world lit only by firelight, where all the rules have changed and each person must fend for himself.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(165)
★★★★
25%
(138)
★★★
15%
(83)
★★
7%
(39)
23%
(126)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Teachable moments

Just finished Scott B. Williams; novel The Pulse: A Novel of Surviving the Collapse of the Grid. While Williams is probably best known for his prepping/survival non-fiction (Bug Out, Bug Out Vehicles, Getting Out Alive and decades of solid writing for Sea Kayaker) he does a more than admirable job of wading into the fiction category.

Unlike other prepping/survival writers out there, Williams isn't exactly a zombie apocolypse kind of guy. The Pulse is fiction, but it holds true to Williams' even-keeled teachings. His characters are down to earth. Some may have some specialized experiences, or have acquired useful knowledge, but other are struggling to learn as they go. They have old aluminum canoes and basic camping gear. No one espcapes in a Humvee, wears tactical gear, lives in a fortified compound, or carries an assault weapon. Williams' story is entertaining and his messages are clear: preparation is critical; you can be prepared without spending a fortune; knowledge and skill are more important than brawn and gadgetry. Even if you don't think of yourself as a prepper, The Pulse is a fun read -- and you'll learn a lot without even realizing it.

And for those of us who remember 1989 when a solar flare knocked out portions of the grid in Canada (leaving millions of people without power) The Pulse will stir up some ghosts.
64 people found this helpful
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Horrible. Simply horrible.

I just finished this book. The only way I could get through it was by skimming or skipping entire chapters. It starts out as an interesting take on what would happen if all electrical systems were destroyed. The sailing parts were interesting at first and obviously well researched. But after 15 paragraphs talking about the boat in the same exact way, I started skipping it.

I also did not understand exactly how everything was destroyed. It mentions a flashing light in the sky and a few people mention solar flares. Yet it was dark when the solar flare hit and the only part of the world that was effected was the dark side of Earth. How does that work? Wouldn't a solar flare hit the part that is facing the sun and destroy that? I am sure there is some logical explanation I am missing, but it was not in the book. Anywhere.

The biggest disappointment was the ending. Not only can you see it coming about 50 pages away, but is so unbelievable you wonder if the author hit his deadline and just had to tie it all up somehow.

If you want a book that is well researched, interesting and informative about what would happen if we were hit by an EMP or solar flare read One Second After. That book really gets to the heart of the discussion and really explores what would happen afterwards.
28 people found this helpful
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Enjoyable, Well Written and Accurate

A relevant topic nicely interleaved with accurate and reasoned information about survival and sailing in an enjoyable novel. A fun and informative read by a writer who now proves he can write fiction as well as informational books. Scott weaves in the thinking processes behind decisions the characters are making regarding their survival...all of which are helpful to those who may have to follow these footsteps sometime in the future. This is Scott's first novel and it comes together well to provide a tale in which to see more clearly the usefulness of many of the suggestions he makes in his prior Bug Out and similar writings. There are nuggets of information interwoven in the pages that one learns without this being a text. Of course, being the owner of a 36' Wharram catamaran and living on an island I particularly enjoyed the book...and because it is nice to read a novel that addresses sailing that is accurate! A well-written novel by someone who knows the details not just from library research but from first-hand adventuring experience. I hope he writes a sequel.
25 people found this helpful
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Best of the lot so far.

Though I direct a university press, teach creative writing at the university level, and have authored over thirty books of my own, I confess a fondness for post-apocalyptic fiction. (I know: I'm supposed to be above this.) I must tell you that in terms of the writing, the technical details, and the editing, THE PULSE is the best example of this sort of fiction that you are likely ever to encounter.

Pay no attention to some of the vacuous negative reviews about this book: The lamentable thing about the Internet is that it has made it possible for people who have rarely entertained an original thought to post their opinions as if they.
11 people found this helpful
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Barely a Pulse

If read it you must, Kindle and quickly delete. Don't kill trees.

One half is a travel-rama of sailing down Caribean way with a Rastafarian aboard, talking strange and looking funny, mon. Weird lights in the sky, a pirate or two, and bad stench and rocks falling from bridges.

The other half is a travel-rama of bicycling from the Big Easy to Mississsipi with bad stench and bridges but no rocks, and circling vultures and lights.

After a book full of traipsing characters, one if by land, two if by sea, an axe swipe to Snidely Whiplash the evil maiden slaver and poof, they all fall down on a sand spit in the infested snake and alligator slime of the bayou. `Why look whose here to save me, it's my uncle Dudley from the Caribean and his sidekick, Weed'. What a glorious miracle indeed, but no problem mon, if your one with the Yah.

Like the chosen catamaran of such shallow draft that virtually skitters along on the froth, the same can be said of this book zipping past touchstones of possible firmament left unanchored in the author's wake. The character, plot and script development is little more than dabbling in the surface skim. The incessant and ubiquitous yammering of daddy and daughter pining for each other makes the reader start wondering what's up with these two. The pliability of characters from urbanite to survivalist, from one dalliance to another, from trauma wonk to salt of the sea is chameleon like. And the dialog is of Rocky and Bullwinkle..

After the marathon of page after page and the climactic rescue of fair maiden from loins of the Whiplash, we, the characters and readers are tossed off in the back-waters of Ponchartrain awaiting with baited breath more of the author's mad scribbling to release us, sequelly onward. Til then I guess we hunker down and learn to gnaw lizards, mon.
8 people found this helpful
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Skip This Dreadful Book!

When compared to the truly great post-apocalyptic books like Alas Babylon, Lucifer's Hammer & Long Journey Home, the Pulse is a badly flawed . It has a lousy plot, weak character development, and a near absence of realistic survival challenges, solutions or information. More, its overt sexism is incredibly off-putting. In the 21st Century, a time when raging sexism is becoming more rare, the author creates an idiot woman who is rescued from a dangerous, post-apocalyptic world by an all-knowing, male, boyfriend-type while her all-knowing father and all-knowing uncle move heaven and Earth sailing a catamaran from Caribbean to a swamp in Mississippi to rescue her,too. Even the villain is a paternalistic, all-knowing type. I don't think the author knows enough about survival to write a 500 word essay. I am offended by his portrayal of women, bored by the flimsy plot and shocked that it made it into print. This is a dreadful book. I should have waited for something by John Wesley Rawles.
7 people found this helpful
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The Pulse

Although the premise is novel, the book is very repetitive and tediously written. Very unsophisticated and predictable. I skipped A LOT, but found that it didn't seem to matter as it all felt like "filler". I'm sorry, but I have to give this book a thumbs down!!
7 people found this helpful
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Editing is non-existent

This book has an interesting premise. The author clearly has a solid understanding of sailing, and knows something about bicycling too. What he doesn't understand a lot about is writing a well-told story. The amount of telling is appalling. It's repetitive and the point of view jumps from character to character.

I specifically purchased The Pulse based on the good reviews and because it had not been self-published, since my experiences with SP books have been poor. Unfortunately, this book seems unedited.

I had to go back and make sure Ulysses Press wasn't a vanity press. It seems it isn't. Perhaps the problem lies in the submission guidelines, where Ulysses says they don't accept fiction. They do handle disaster survival books, and I guess that's why they took this on. But their inexperience in the genre shows.
7 people found this helpful
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too predictable

had high expectations for this book, then i started reading it.

the female characters were barely believable and with very few exceptions, stereotypical.

the lead female character, five or six days into a grid down collapse, the first time she is left alone and expected to guard the groups stuff, decides instead that she needs to take a bath, leaving everything, including the groups only firearm, to go wandering off looking for a "quiet spot" to take her bath.

you would think that most people a week into a grid down collapse would have already had their "reality check" and think before doing something so stupid.

she did have her moment, unfortunately, thru her own stupidity, she put herself into that situation.

the sailboat story, i skipped it after the second or third installment.

the ending, what can i say about it other than, seriously?
4 people found this helpful
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Last one standing

After Hurricane Katrina, this book is totally believable. Society would fall in less than 24 hours. This books makes me want to stay in shape so that I'll be ready for the big collapse...only the strong survive. Definitely a cliffhanger with every chapter. I guess we have to wait for the sequel to find out which woman Grant chooses for his end-of-world vacation....Also, not to choose a book by it's cover, but this one could be the exception...totally Mississippi. Good read.
4 people found this helpful