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However, Cinders can also choose to undermine Carmosa's plans and efforts, have her imprisoned or humiliated (if she finds out Carmosa forged their invitations to the royal ball), and even attempt to poison her in order to remove her from power. Madame Ghede: The local medicine woman and a friend of Cinders' late mother. The townsfolk think of ...
Strange Aeons #4: The Whisper Out of Time December 2016: 96 978-1-60125-908-0: Softcover PZO90112 Richard Pett Strange Aeons #5: What Grows Within January 2017: 96 978-1-60125-913-4: Softcover PZO90113 John Compton Strange Aeons #6: Black Stars Beckon February 2017: 96 978-1-60125-919-6: Softcover PZO90114 Jim Groves
Apocalyptic fiction is a subgenre of science fiction that is concerned with the end of civilization due to a potentially existential catastrophe such as nuclear warfare, pandemic, extraterrestrial attack, impact event, cybernetic revolt, technological singularity, dysgenics, supernatural phenomena, divine judgment, climate change, resource depletion or some other general disaster.
The novel takes place on a world in which humans live in "spires," huge cylindrical arcologies 10,000 feet (3,000 meters) tall and 2 miles (3.2 km) across. Back on earth, their world is a place of horrors, full of dangerous beasts that occasionally make their way into the spires.
Richard Haywood (born 17 May 1975), who writes under the pen name RR Haywood, is one of the UK's bestselling self-published authors. [1]Most known for the Undead series of post-apocalyptic zombie novels, Haywood has published more than 40 books and is a Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Amazon, and Audible multiple bestselling author with 25 Kindle and Audible bestsellers and nearly four ...
The majority of the book consists of encyclopedia references to the events, characters, locations, and technology found in the Ender's Game series up to the publication of Ender in Exile. The book is notable for having new and behind the scenes information on certain topics such as Battle School Slang, The Look of the Formics, The History of ...
Charlie MacFell is the sixteen-year-old son of Edward MacFell, a cruel farm owner who punishes the farm's children and teenagers by beating them on a sharp cinder path, causing their hands and knees to be grazed. Among MacFell's main targets is Ginger Slater, a workhouse boy who he whips for stealing a book to try and learn to read.
The trilogy (U.K versions), in order of publication from left to right. The Dark Age is a trilogy by Mark Chadbourn set around the beginning of the third millennium. [1] While the previous series was a clear fantasy story, this has strings of gothic horror and existentialism woven into it. The three books are: The Devil in Green (2002) [2]