Blue fire / John Gilstrap.
They call it Hell Day--a world war that lasted less than twenty-four hours. Nations unleashed weapons that destroyed more than a century's worth of technology. Electrical grids cannot generate power. Communications and computers cannot run. And the remnants of the U. S. government cannot be depended upon. Those who survived must live as their ancestors did, off a land ruled by the whims of nature. One-time congressional representative Victoria Emerson has become the new leader of the small town of Ortho, West Virginia. She has been struggling to provide food and shelter for the town's inhabitants, while coping with desperate refugees. An autumn morning's calm is shattered when her teenage son sounds the alarm with the cry "Blue Fire"--the code phrase for imminent danger. A band of National Guardsmen intends to take Ortho and its resources for themselves. They have enough soldiers and firepower to eliminate anyone who dares to stop them. But Victoria swore an oath to defend and protect her people, and she isn't about to surrender. It's time to tap into the traditional American values of courage, ingenuity, and determination -- and fight fire with fire.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781496728579 (hardcover)
- Physical Description: 325 pages ; 24 cm.
- Edition: First Kensington hardcover edition.
- Publisher: New York : Kensington Publishing Corp., 2022.
Search for related items by subject
| Subject: | Ex-legislators > Fiction. Nuclear warfare > Fiction. Single mothers > Fiction. West Virginia > Fiction. |
| Genre: | Thrillers (Fiction) Apocalyptic fiction. |
Search for related items by series
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
| Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cookstown Branch | FIC Gilst | 31681010266443 | FICTION | Available | - |
- Baker & Taylor
"They call it Hell Day--a world war that lasted less than twenty-four hours. Nations unleashed weapons that destroyed more than a century's worth of technology. Those who survived must live as their ancestors did, off a land ruled by the whims of nature.One-time congressional representative Victoria Emerson has become the new leader of the small town of Ortho, West Virginia. She has been struggling to provide food and shelter for the town's inhabitants, while coping with desperate refugees. An autumn morning's calm is shattered when her teenage son sounds the alarm with the cry 'Blue Fire'--the code phrase for imminent danger. A band of National Guardsmen intends to take Ortho and its resources for themselves. They have enough soldiers and firepower to eliminate anyone who dares to stop them. But Victoria swore an oath to defend and protect her people, and she isn't about to surrender"-- - Baker & Taylor
A former congressional representative tries to keep her West Virginia town safe after Hell Day, a world war that lasted only 24 hours and destroyed a centuryâs worth of technology in the second novel of the series following Blue Fire. - Random House, Inc.
A thrilling new suspense novel with shades of The Stand and One Second After from the New York Times bestselling author of the Jonathan Grave series, that fans of Ben Coes and Brad Taylor wonât want to miss! In the wake of a global conflict that has devastated America, those who survived live in a world without technology or governance. They look to one womanâsingle mother and former West Virginia Congressperson Victoria Emersonâto lead and protect those determined to rebuild all they have lost…
âEngrossing…Fans of doomsday military thrillers will delight in the resilience of Gilstrapâs family of preppers and their quest for survival on their terms.â âPublishers Weekly
They call it Hell Dayâa world war that lasted less than twenty-four hours. Nations unleashed weapons that destroyed more than a centuryâs worth of technology. Electrical grids cannot generate power. Communications and computers cannot run. And the remnants of the U. S. government cannot be depended upon. Those who survived must live as their ancestors did, off a land ruled by the whims of nature.  Â
Â
One-time congressional representative Victoria Emerson has become the new leader of the small town of Ortho, West Virginia. She has been struggling to provide food and shelter for the townâs inhabitants, while coping with desperate refugees. An autumn morningâs calm is shattered when her teenage son sounds the alarm with the cry âBlue Fireââthe code phrase for imminent danger.
Â
A band of National Guardsmen intends to take Ortho and its resources for themselves. They have enough soldiers and firepower to eliminate anyone who dares to stop them. But Victoria swore an oath to defend and protect her people, and she isnât about to surrender. Itâs time to tap into the traditional American values of courage, ingenuity, and determination â and fight fire with fire.