Modern Myth Meets Thriller: Why Hominid Redefines Bigfoot Fiction
- Jane Hill
- Sep 30, 2025
- 2 min read
For decades, Bigfoot fiction has hovered between folklore and horror—delivering campfire chills or creature-feature carnage. But what happens when a novel takes the Bigfoot legend seriously, applying hard science, evolutionary theory, and modern suspense to one of America’s greatest cryptozoological mysteries?
Enter Hominid by bestselling author R.D. Brady, a thriller that doesn’t just retell the myth—it reconstructs it from the DNA up.
Hominid Pushes Bigfoot Fiction Into New Territory
In Hominid, Dr. Tess Brannick isn’t chasing shadows—she’s using her background in anatomy and physiology to prove Bigfoot exists. Her scientific pursuit leads her deep into the forests of Northern California, where she’s backed by a powerful corporate funder with an agenda of his own.
This isn’t your typical Bigfoot yarn. Brady fuses the survivalist urgency of The Revenant with the scientific intrigue of Jurassic Park, creating a version of Bigfoot fiction that’s as thrilling as it is thought-provoking.
A Realistic Lens on a Mythical Creature
What sets Hominid apart is its plausibility. The story grounds the Bigfoot legend in evolutionary biology and climatological threats—what if the creature isn’t a hoax, but a hominid relic we’ve failed to recognize? Brady asks, and then answers, with a narrative that’s fast-paced, emotionally grounded, and full of jaw-dropping twists.
Unlike pulp horror depictions of Bigfoot as a monstrous predator, Hominid presents the creature as complex, intelligent, and tragically misunderstood. It’s Bigfoot fiction for readers who want more than footprints in the snow—they want a story with heart, science, and teeth.
Why Hominid Belongs on Your Shelf
If you’ve ever enjoyed thrillers that blend myth with science—like Relic by Preston & Child or The Atlantis Gene by A.G. Riddle—Hominid will hit your sweet spot. It’s gripping, fresh, and turns a cultural curiosity into a thrilling “what-if” scenario with real stakes.
So if you’re ready to rethink what Bigfoot fiction can be, start with Hominid. Just don’t go into the woods alone.





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