The Last Unvaccinated: Chronicle of a Silent ExtinctionWhat if the greatest promise of safety became the seed of humanity's downfall?Spanning over a decade-from the hopeful dawn of January 2021 to the bleak silence of December 2032-The Last Unvaccinated is a haunting chronicle of how ordinary lives, bound by fear and trust, are slowly consumed by an unseen catastrophe.Told in fifty-two richly detailed chapters, this dystopian epic follows the fragile thread of human survival as societies crumble under the weight of their own choices. At first, there are only whispers: faint rumors of side effects, shadows in the data, families divided by invisible lines. Governments reassure, media silences, and life continues under the banner of "safety." But beneath the slogans, the world begins to fracture.From crowded hospitals and silent burials to abandoned cities and desperate camps, the story traces a relentless decline. By 2026, the collapse can no longer be denied-institutions falter, borders lose meaning, and the very idea of civilization slips away. Survivors become wanderers, clinging to fire, memory, and scraps of trust. Technology fades into myth, libraries into ruins, until only fragments of humanity remain.And yet, amidst the ashes, resilience endures. Children born in shadows, nomads rebuilding fragile bonds, the last tribes of the unvaccinated carrying stories into the dark. The final chapters, set in December 2032, capture the end of an age: the ghosts of the past haunting empty streets, the last gathering of scattered survivors, and the realization that the world has become one of few.More than a novel, The Last Unvaccinated is a meditation on memory, division, and the fragile threads that keep societies alive. It asks unsettling questions: What binds us together when families fracture? What does safety mean when defined by authority, not experience? And when humanity itself becomes rare, what remains truly worth preserving?For readers of dystopian and apocalyptic fiction-fans of Cormac McCarthy's The Road, Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven, or Stephen King's The Stand-this book offers a narrative both intimate and sweeping. It is not only a story of collapse, but also of survival, love, and the stubborn ember of hope that refuses to be extinguished.Enter this chronicle and witness, year by year, the fading of a world we once called normal-and the struggle of the last survivors to carry its memory forward.