Tiffany McDaniel’s On the Savage Side (published in Spanish as En el lado salvaje ) is not a book that asks for permission. From its first pages, it demands that the reader look away from the sanitized edges of society and stare directly into the abyss of addiction, poverty, and gendered violence. Inspired by the real-life unsolved murders of the “Chillicothe Six” in Ohio, McDaniel crafts a lyrical, devastating, and fiercely feminist narrative that transforms true crime into a requiem for the forgotten.

Critics have noted that the novel’s unrelenting darkness can feel overwhelming. McDaniel does not offer a cathartic escape or a tidy resolution. The violence is graphic, the addiction is grim, and the system fails utterly. Yet, this is precisely the point. On the Savage Side is a protest novel. It refuses to let the reader feel good about feeling sad. Instead, it demands action—or at least, a radical shift in perception. By the final page, the river still flows, the mill still smokes, and the women remain on the savage side of the highway. The only victory is that we, the readers, have finally looked.

Structurally, McDaniel employs a chorus of voices—the dead women themselves. This is where On the Savage Side transcends the true crime genre. By giving the murdered women a collective “we,” she restores their agency. They are not objects of a police investigation; they are narrators of their own tragedy. This ghostly chorus mocks the ineptitude of law enforcement and the apathy of the media. One of the novel’s most harrowing themes is that these women were not killed in a frenzy of rage, but through a slow, systematic neglect by society while they were alive. The serial killer in the story is merely the symptom; the disease is a culture that deems certain lives “unimportant.”

In conclusion, Tiffany McDaniel’s En el lado salvaje is a masterpiece of eco-feminist gothic. It takes the raw materials of Midwestern poverty and transforms them into a howl of rage and a whisper of love. To read this book is to understand that savagery is not a state of nature, but a reflection of our own indifference. The twins ask, “What is the opposite of a monster?” McDaniel answers: Not a hero, but a witness. And for the women of Chillicothe, that is everything.