Tag Archives: dystopian fiction

Book Spotlight — The Thirteenth Guardian

21 Jun


On Tour with Prism Book Tours

The Thirteenth Guardian
(The Thirteenth Guardian #1)
By K.M. Lewis
Apocalyptic, Dystopian, Thriller
Paperback & ebook, 307 Pages
June 11th 2019

DA VINCI’S SECRET PALES. Michelangelo concealed an explosive truth in his famous Creation of Adam fresco in the Sistine Chapel. Eve did not cause the fall of man. She carried a far more devastating secret for millennia — one that will change the world forever.

As the modern-day world suffers the cataclysmic effects of the “Plagues of Egypt,” Avery Fitzgerald, a statuesque Astrophysics major at Stanford, discovers that she is mysteriously bound to five strangers by an extremely rare condition that foremost medical experts cannot explain. Thrust into extraordinary circumstances, they race against time to stay alive as they are pursued by an age-old adversary and the world around them collapses into annihilation. Under sacred oath, The Guardians — a far more archaic and enigmatic secret society than the Freemasons, Templars, and the Priory — protect Avery as she embarks on a daring quest that only legends of old have been on before. Avery must come to terms with the shocking realization that the blood of an ancient queen flows through her veins and that the fate of the world now rests on her shoulders.

The Thirteenth Guardian is Book One of a daring new Trilogy that will shake you to your core.

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Excerpt

“Please, Ma’am, I must confirm that you are safe in the bunker before I can leave.” The officer motioned for Mariko and the kids to head into the bunker and lock up.

He verified that the door of the bunker was secured from the inside and then got back into the military truck and left in haste.

Mariko walked down the dimly lit passageway that opened up into a well-appointed bunker. The lights automatically came on when she and her three daughters walked in. The space was designed like an apartment with couches, beds, a kitchen—everything that one would need over a period of several months. In the middle of the kitchen was a black phone.

She led the three girls to a small adjoining room. “You all get fifteen minutes on your iPads, and then it’s night-night time.” She tried to remain as normal as she could so that the children would not detect the sense of fear that now fully consumed her. Mariko went back into the kitchen, picked up the phone, and dialed her husband’s mobile number.

 

About The Author

K.M. Lewis has lived in multiple countries around the world and speaks several languages. Lewis holds a graduate degree from one of the Universities featured in his book. When he is not writing, Lewis doubles as a management consultant, with clients in just about every continent. He does much of his writing while on long flights and at farflung airports around the globe. He currently resides on the East Coast of the United States with his family.

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Ends June 26, 2019

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Book Review: Fatherless

18 Mar

513116_w185The year is 2042, and a long-predicted tipping point has arrived. For the first time in human history, the economic pyramid has flipped: The feeble old now outnumber the vigorous young, and this untenable situation is intensifying a battle between competing cultural agendas. Reporter Julia Davidson-a formerly award-winning journalist seeking to revive a flagging career-is investigating the growing crisis, unaware that her activity makes her a pawn in an ominous conspiracy. Plagued by nightmares about her absent father, Julia finds herself drawn to the quiet strength of a man she meets at a friend’s church. As the engrossing plot of FATHERLESS unfolds, Julia will face choices that pit professional success against personal survival in an increasingly uncertain and dangerous world.

In the dystopian tradition of books like 1984, Brave New World, and The Hunger Games, FATHERLESS vividly imagines a future in which present-day trends come to sinister fruition. The second and third books in the series, CHILDLESS and GODLESS, will follow at eight-month intervals.

Excerpt

dobsonDr. James Dobson is the Founder and President of Family Talk, a nonprofit organization that produces his radio program, “Family Talk with Dr. James Dobson.” He is the author of more than 30 books dedicated to the preservation of the family. He has been active in governmental affairs and has advised three U.S. presidents on family matters. Dr. Dobson is married to Shirley and they have two grown children, Danae and Ryan, and two grandchildren. The Dobsons reside in Colorado Springs, CO.

author-brunerKurt Bruner serves as Pastor of Spiritual Formation at Lake Pointe Church and on the adjunct faculty of Dallas Theological Seminary. A graduate of Talbot Seminary and former Vice President with Focus on the Family, Kurt led the teams creating films, magazines, books, and radio drama. As President of HomePointe Inc., he helps local church leaders create an ongoing culture of intentional families. Kurt is the best-selling author of more than a dozen books. Kurt and his wife, Olivia, live in Rockwall, Texas.

My Impressions:

Fatherless, the first in a 3 book series by James Dobson and Kurt Bruner, is Page Turner’s March selection. We will be discussing this novel on Thursday. If you have read the book, we welcome your comments. So far, I have heard comments like weird and depressing from our members. How would you describe it?

Fatherless is a plot-driven dystopian novel. The setting is America in 2042. The trends of today — low birth rate, fatherless families, and more entitlement programs — have come to a head, leaving the United States with more elderly citizens than young productive workers. Embryonic selection is the norm, and those who are considered debits, taking more from society than they contribute, are encouraged to transition, a pretty-upped term for suicide. The future looks bleak, but there is still a remnant that views life as a gift from God, rather than a commodity.

Dobson and Bruner paint a rather dismal future. Men have abdicated their roles as provider and protector, children are seen as a drain on resources, and the elderly are viewed as a means to economic relief once they have transitioned. I found myself at times depressed and at others angered by the majority viewpoint of the society depicted in the novel. The end of the book is unfinished — there are 2 more books in the series — but there does seem to be a little hope promised.

Overall, I would recommend Fatherless. It is a good book for discussion and to get Christians to examine their beliefs and their role in the future. The characters are a bit stiff and the book takes a while to get going, but the subject matter overshadows these weaknesses.

Recommended.

(I purchased Fatherless for my book club, Page Turners. All opinions are mine alone.)

To purchase a copy of Fatherless, click on the image below.