Journey By Fire series by Bruce W. Perry (#1,2)
Requirements: ePUB Reader, AZW Reader, 1.21 MB
Overview: I love good stories, and sharing them. I’ve been reading a lot since I was a shy kid, growing up in a small literary town called Concord, Massachusetts. I was the kid sitting under a tree, head buried in a book. I read every hardcover and paperback I could get my hands on. It reminds me of a quote attributed to the young Abe Lincoln, "my best friend is the man who’ll get me a book I ain’t read."
Genre: Sci-Fi/Fantasy
#1 Journey By Fire
Armed with a crossbow, Mike Wade roams the dystopian USA deserts in search of his captive daughter Kara.
Bad things tend to happen in threes: because of global warming, the West is now completely on fire. The temperature has gone up everywhere by an average of 10 degrees F. They’ve lost control of the massive wildfires, which have scorched California, Nevada, Colorado, and the Southwest; the fires themselves are creeping eastward at seven miles per hour.
In the chaos, an authoritarian strongman has taken over the USA, promising to make short work of both the fires and the lawlessness. Finally, there are rumors that invaders from overseas have landed in California.
The problem for Michael Wade and his family is that his daughter Kara had been taking a year of college abroad in Mexico to specialize in Spanish. She hasn’t been able to make it home, and Wade has set off from Vermont by train and on foot, with his backpack and essentials, including a crossbow, to rescue her.
Along the way he joins other refugees on his treacherous journey to the Southwest, including Phoebe Tate, a funky young lady who made jewelry in the desert, Wiley James, a trucker from Wyoming who was forced to abandon his rig, and Jonesy, a riverboat captain who takes them down the Colorado River.
Society has broken down; there is no broadcast news from the West anymore, just quasi El Presidente’s propaganda and creepily soothing explanations for everything. Only the trains run here and there; oil production and imports have slowed to a trickle. Most people don’t have fuel and the train system has been left intact to provide the regime with its necessities.
Wade only knows that his last communication from Kara came from Sierra Vista in southern Arizona. He’ll have to get there by whichever way he can, by river and desert.
#2 Escape From Tonto Basin
Part 2 of Journey By Fire takes Mike Wade south from the now defunct Glen Canyon Dam, on the Colorado River, after battling a feral militia that had arisen in the desert. He heads deep into the Arizona desert where his daughter is rumored held captive. He joins up with an escaped prisoner of the regime named Johnny Ironcloud.
Bad things tend to happen in threes: because of global warming, the West is now completely on fire. The temperature has gone up everywhere by an average of 10 degrees F. They’ve lost control of the massive wildfires, which have scorched California, Nevada, Colorado, and the Southwest; the fires themselves are creeping eastward at seven miles per hour.
In the chaos, a fascist-leaning president has been elected – he has formed a military regime that has divided the country roughly between the red and blue states. Finally, power loves a vacuum, and there are rumors that foreign troops are invading and occupying California.
The problem for Michael Wade and his family is that his daughter Kara had been taking a year of college abroad in Mexico to specialize in Spanish. She hasn’t been able to make it home, and Wade has set off from Vermont by train and on foot, with his backpack and essentials, including a crossbow, to rescue her.
Along the way he joins other refugees on his treacherous journey to the Southwest, including Phoebe Tate, a funky young lady who made jewelry in the desert, Wiley James, a trucker from Wyoming who was forced to abandon his rig, and Jonesy, a riverboat captain who takes them down the Colorado River.
Society has broken down; there is no broadcast news from the West anymore, just quasi El Presidente’s propaganda and creepily soothing explanations for everything. Only the trains run here and there; oil production and imports have slowed to a trickle. Most people don’t have fuel and the train system has been left intact to provide the regime with its necessities.
Wade only knows that his last communication from Kara came from Sierra Vista in southern Arizona. He’ll have to get there by whichever way he can, by river and desert.
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