Brad Manuel as a writer presented this ‘The Last Tribe’ masterpiece that is narrated by Scott Brick. No Plan B and Alexander Hamilton are among other narrations of Scott Brick. Envision being separated from everyone else on the planet, one of simply a modest bunch to endure a worldwide pandemic. Besides the fact that you battle to track down food, water and asylum however you likewise manage the pity and losing everybody you know and all that you have. Greg Dixon, who was in his second decade of life experiencing that bad dream and going to school beyond Boston, was isolated from his family when a pandemic struck.
His cohorts and educators were dead, decaying in quarter-diverted mortuary strides from his room. The evenings were getting colder and his food has run out. The last message from his dad is to move away from the city and to meet at his grandparents’ town in distant New Hampshire. Realizing the approaching New Britain winter could be the last sign of his almost certain demise, Greg packs what little food he can find and sets off on his 100-mile walk north with the unfaltering conviction that his family is alive and will go along with him.
As the quick and destructive illness stripped away loved ones, Greg’s dad, John, was caught in South Carolina and winter make it unimaginable for him to get to his child. John and his three siblings give off an impression of being safe, however, they are dissipated across a secured US, compelled to sit tight for the finish of mankind before making a trip to the mountains of New Hampshire. Spring showed up and the Dixons advanced north to track down youthful Greg. They meet others on a journey gradually framing the last clan of humankind from a couple of individuals still alive in the Upper east.
The book investigated what could be achieved assuming the circumstances permitted. The writer purposely set up the sort of plague, its beginning and side effects, the pace of disease and casualty all so that the world would be left moderately unfilled however generally flawless, and involved that setting to recount the tale of transformation in an undeniably more full-grown manner than most zombie or torment books at any point find time to do.