The Siege cover

The Siege

Arisen • Book 13

4.52 Goodreads
(1.3K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

Thirteen books in, Fuchs somehow raises the stakes higher than ever — this is the apocalypse with nowhere left to retreat.

  • Great if you want: military zombie fiction with genuine tactical depth and ensemble stakes
  • The experience: relentless and propulsive — multiple concurrent crises with zero breathing room
  • The writing: Fuchs juggles a massive cast across split timelines without losing tension or clarity
  • Skip if: you haven't read the earlier Arisen books — this won't stand alone

About This Book

At book thirteen in the Arisen series, The Siege arrives at the moment every long-running series builds toward: the point where everything is simultaneously falling apart and converging. The dead are closing in without limit. The cure is tantalizingly close but nowhere near guaranteed. The defenders are spent, outnumbered, and running out of choke points to hold. Fuchs keeps three interlocking storylines burning at full intensity throughout, and the cumulative weight of a dozen prior books of earned attachment to these characters makes every close call feel genuinely costly. This is apocalyptic fiction that takes its own stakes seriously.

What distinguishes the reading experience here is Fuchs's pacing — he writes action sequences with a kinetic, almost tactical clarity that keeps long battle chapters from blurring together, and he knows exactly when to pull back and let a quieter human moment land. Thirteen books in, the prose has the confidence of a writer who trusts his world completely. The structure juggles its parallel storylines without ever losing momentum, cutting between them at precisely the right moments. Readers who have followed this series will find The Siege delivers on the long promise of the whole.

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