The end of the world begins not with meteors screaming across the sky, but in a rundown coffee shop on a quiet morning. Leland Delano—a brilliant chemist and inventor of a dangerous formula—punches a code into a “staff only” door, and solemnly rides the private elevator to the fifteenth floor of Vogel Enterprises. At the end of a long mahogany table sits his friend, Banner Vogel—Between them: a single, unsolvable problem. A young man has stumbled onto their lethal secret. One life now threatens an entire civilization. Murder, they decide, is the only rational solution.
This is the prologue of Roxanne Ward’s Sins of Survival, and it sets the moral engine that drives every page: survival demands compromise, and compromise has a price.
When Morality Becomes a Mask
After the seven-day meteorite storm plunges the planet into perpetual dusk, governments collapse and corporations rise. In Colorado, the dominant oligarchs impose a brutal caste system:
- The Corporates impose order for profit.
- The Neighwah enforce dominance for control.
- The Dailys obey to survive.
Though Vogel righteously opposes the tyrannical oligarchs’ treatment of the people, he is not noble or innocent. That is the beating heart of the story; the moral engine is not violence, it’s permission.
The Cost of Looking Away
Survival isn’t the only currency in this world. Silence is too. The final nails of humanity’s coffin won’t be hammered by the few in power—they will be driven by the thousands who won’t fight for justice.
In this world, trash is treasure, children are bartered, dissenters are executed, and the best minds vanish into research camps. The horror isn’t the violence—it’s how routine it becomes. How quickly a mother justifies turning in her neighbor. How the smallest infraction is a death sentence.
The Moral Body Count
Every tragedy in Sins of Survival is paid for twice. Once in flesh. Once in conscience. Death is no longer the biggest loss here; it’s hope.
Once a society considers people expendable, once persuasion morphs into cruelty, and once laws become arbitrary, every atrocity is sanctioned. The true tragedy in this story is the collapse of the inner compass and the slow, silent murder of humanity inside the humans who are still breathing.
Yet, among the terroristic barbarism, there is a band of fearless heroes. From the shadows, they will stab at their foes, suffer the wounds of war, risk everything to defeat the overlords, and commit every necessary sin before they’ll give up their freedom.
The Soldier with a Heart
Grayson Takota is the military leader of the hidden sanctuary town of New Haven. He’s a stoic soldier trained to obey the orders he’s given. Charged with keeping the citizens bound for the sanctuary safe, he is diligent and focused. That is, until he meets Jillian Delano, one of the chemist’s fugitive daughters. She’s gorgeous, vulnerable, and fiery. He’s instantly smitten, and his desire compels him to break his own rules. But everything about her is trouble, and more than once, he finds himself at a crossroads. Her sister Arial is defiant, but cautious. She doesn’t trust this militant, order-barking man, and she’ll be damned if she’ll let him separate them.
Humanity on the Line
Sins of Survival isn’t about the end of the world, nor is it about saving the people of the world; it’s about preserving humanity.
Grab your copy, now.







