TicCity isn’t
safe and so the sooner Selah and company can head west, the better. Selah is
attempting to complete the Third Protocol. Selah is a novarium. Those who understand
the full process are very difficult to find, and those that don’t understand
tend to want to harvest novariums’ blood and, at the worst, kill them. But for
Selah to complete the Third Protocol would mean the end of novarium and all
people could live as just that: people. Novarium are imbued with certain
exaggerated abilities: from seeing objects clearly 20 miles away to being
amazingly agile. But those abilities also deteriorate as the Second Protocol
comes to a close. Selah, if she can’t reach the Third Protocol, will lose her
mental capabilities and eventually perish.
The world Selah lives in is a United
States that doesn’t look so great anymore. Most of the country is desolate and
there are dangerous storms that frequently crop up. Naturally, she travels into
these perilous parts to the only protected areas she’s heard of – specifically,
the domes at Cleveland and Chicago, though they, of course, involve their own
inner perils. She travels with her mom, brother, sister and Bodhi, her apparent
love interest, along with a few others. No one has before completed the Third
Protocol. Why should Selah be able to accomplish what so many before her haven’t?
This teen fiction novel from an
inspirational publisher was unexpected in a positive way. The world Selah lives
in is a dystopia. Even without her personal struggles as a novarium, it is
still a very dangerous world to live in. And with her abilities, which include
energy-thrusting, the story has elements of the supernatural, which I enjoy.
Because of this supernatural dystopia, I found myself engaged in the story. On
the downside, I have not read the previous two books, this being the third in
the Stone Braide Chronicles, so I am
missing back-story. For example, something went down in the Mountain. What,
exactly? Also, what does an AirWagon look like? (Thank goodness for imaginations!)
Maybe it’s addressed in other books, but I would’ve liked to know more about
the supporting characters. Overall, I found this story to be intriguing. It’s a
world I don’t want to live in, but it’s a fascinating literary landscape!
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