Wednesday, 12 September 2012

BOOK OF THE DAY: The Sundered by Ruthanne Reid

by Ruthanne Reid





BOOK DESCRIPTION
Harry Iskinder knows the rules. Don't touch the water, or it will pull you under. Conserve food, because there's no arable land. Use Sundered slaves gently, or they die too quickly to be worthwhile.

With extinction on the horizon and a world lost to deadly flood, Harry searches for a cure: the Hope of Humanity, the mysterious artifact that gave humans control over the Sundered centuries ago. According to legend, the Hope can fix the planet.

But the Hope holds more secrets than Harry knows. Powerful Sundered Ones willingly bow to him just to get near it. Ambitious enemies pursue him, sure that the Hope is a weapon. Friends turn their backs, afraid Harry will choose wrong.

And Harry has a choice to make. The time for sharing the Earth is done. Either the Sundered survive and humanity ends, or humanity lives for a while, but the Sundered are wiped out. 

He never wanted this choice. He still has to make it. In his broken, flooded world, Hope comes with a price.


AUTHOR BIO



Ruthanne Reid was raised in the woods, but fortunately her isolation was offset by regular visits to New York City.
Writing in and around Seattle, she owns dust-covered degrees in music and religion, and is generally considered dangerous around household electronics. She belongs to a husband, a housemate, and a cat, respectively.
The Sundered is her first novel.
Twitter: @ruthannereid || Facebook: ThisReidWrites || http://ruthannereid.com


REVIEWS
5.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't put it down July 3, 2012
By Darren
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Admittedly, I came to know the author this year. And I bought the book out of support like any friend would do, prepared to pass on the obligatory congratulations. What I didn't expect was that I wouldn't be able to put it down. That I would become so immersed in the story, that I would forget I knew the author, forget that there even was an author. So I read it in one sitting! And now I'm writing a review to tell you it's a worthwhile science fiction read. 300+ pages of suspense and thought-provoking, unpredictable intrigue, and my mind is still spinning about the implications of what I read. My unbiased opinion is that this is a great story, deftly written, flowing naturally and drawing you into the precarious world of Harry and the Sundered. I may even read it again. My only question - how long do I have to wait for the next Ruthanne Reid book? That one I will most surely not be buying only out of courtesy. 

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