Moonrise

by Mitchell Smith

Snowfall (3)

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The World is Frozen Civilization survives in pockets of warmth, most notably in the vast, Mississippi-based Middle Kingdom of North America and in glacier-covered Boston. Boston, where high technology that borders on magic is used to create the "moonrisen," people with the genes of animals. Boston, which looks at the growing strength of Middle Kingdom, united under the brilliant King and Commander, Sam Monroe, and sees a time when Boston will not rule. A coup destroys Middle Kingdom's royal show more family, save for young Prince Bajazet. With Boston's minions in pursuit, before long Baj is Prince no longer, just a man on the run. His saviours are three of the moon's children, who are conspiring with the surviving northern Tribes to overthrow Boston. Baj has no choice-he must side with the rebels or die. show less

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2011 (1) action (1) adventure (1) apocalypse (1) bedroom (1) book (1) Book 3 (1) Box 67 (1) ebook (2) fantasy (6) fiction (3) FictionDB (2) K (1) Kbooks (1) Location: Library (1) March 24 (1) own (1) P (1) paperback (1) post-apocalyptic fiction (1) RIP (1) sci-fi-read (2) science fiction (3) sf (2) sff (1) SmithM (1) sold (1) suspense (1) The Snowfall Trilogy (1) UD (1)

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Member Reviews

3 reviews
I read and enjoyed the first book in the series, Snowfall, so I hunted down the other two. It's been hundreds of years since a change in Jupiter's orbit brings on a massive ice age, and modern civilization collapses. The action takes place in North America, and a variety of regional communities have grown up. I really like all the different societies, and the characters he creates. In the first book, I had some trouble believing that the ecology/economy of the Trappers would work, and became happier as they migrated south. In the second book, I found the Middle Kingdom and North Map Mexico to be believable, and the sweeping action riveting. The third book takes the action through the Indian* tribes up to DNA-twisting show more science-fictionally-magical Boston.

The second and third books open about 20 years after the end of the previous book, with a protagonist who is a young man now and was a baby at the end of the earlier book -- a most unusual way to continue a series, and quite satisfying. The second book is war, and politics, between three regions. It's rather grounded and realistic, thought there are some fantastic elements. The third book is a quest. The action is one long trip, probably suicidal, to strike a blow for justice. This book takes us into the strangeness that Boston has created, and goes through other wonders. The "farmers" are eerie, the animalistic Boston Guard is astonishing, and the climbing sequence is fantastic. I did have a bit of trouble in the 3rd book, keeping suspension of disbelief down about the Boston economy.

While each book is quite different, and probably could be read on its own, I think you'll get more out of them by reading them in order, if only due to the handful of continuing characters. If I hadn't read them in order, I wouldn't have been on the edge of my seat, terrified, as Martha traveled from her home to the Island. Yowza.

There are wonderful, strong women characters: Catania the Trapper doctor; Patience the slightly mad, rather blood-thirsty, flying Bostonian meddler; Queen Joan of the Middle Kingdom, who was Crazy Joan of the Trappers, and likely to say "Fuck, let's get this over with" on ceremonial occasions; and Nancy the sort-of fox; Charmian is critical to Sam Monroe's greatest military victory.

*They're kinda, sorta Indian tribes.
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3rd book in the Snowfall Trilogy set in a premature future Ice Age brought about by alterations in the orbit of Jupiter after several major comet impacts which in turn altered the Earth's orbit or declination to the degree that a new Ice Age was created in mere decades; thus wiping out modern civilization and leaving the survivors with meager remnants of basic technology.
3rd book in the Snowfall Trilogy set in a premature future Ice Age brought about by alterations in the orbit of Jupiter after several major comet impacts which in turn altered the Earth's orbit or declination to the degree that a new Ice Age was created in mere decades; thus wiping out modern civilization and leaving the survivors with meager remnants of basic technology.

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Post-Apocalyptic Fiction
57 works; 3 members

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9 Works 661 Members

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Moonrise

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3569 .M635 .M66Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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70
Popularity
442,490
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.40)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
1