From the author of There
Comes a Prophet and Along the
Watchtower comes a new literary journey exploring the clash between reason
and faith, and the power of hope and love.
After centuries of
religiously motivated war, the world has been split in two. Now the Blessed
Lands are ruled by pure faith, while in the Republic, reason is the guiding
light—two different realms, kept apart and at peace by a treaty and an ocean.
Summary: A
mysterious nine-year-old from the Blessed Lands sails into the lives of a
couple in the Republic, claiming to be the Daughter of the Sea and the Sky. Is
she a troubled child longing to return home, or a powerful prophet sent to
unravel the fabric of the Republic? The answer will change the lives of all she
meets... and perhaps their world as well.
Author: David
Litwack
Genre:
Fantasy/Speculative Literary Fiction
Release Date: May
19th, 2014
Publisher:
Evolved Publishing
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Read an Excerpt:
Jason grabbed the girl just as she began to sink. Despite
the buffeting sea, he carried her back to the shore without straining and lay
her fragile form on a swath of grass beyond the rocks—a slip of a child no more
than nine or ten years old.
Plain cotton pants clung to the girl’s legs, and an
elaborately embroidered tunic covered her slender frame—the typical garb of the
zealots, but other than her clothing, she looked nothing like a zealot. Her
skin was light and perfect, unblemished but for a trickle of blood on her arm.
Her golden hair hung down to the middle of her back, and her round eyes held
the color of the ocean.
Were Helena a believer, she’d have considered this the face
of an angel.
Jason offered his bottle, but the girl shied away. Helena
cradled the child’s head and tilted her chin while he trickled a few drops into
her mouth.
The girl licked her cracked lips and opened for more. After
she’d drunk her fill, she turned to Helena. Her eyes grabbed and held. “The
dream,” she said. “It’s true. I can see it in your eyes.”
Helena felt a sudden urge to distract the girl, to disrupt
that penetrating gaze. “Who are you?”
The girl ignored the question, instead resting her hand on
Jason’s forearm.
His muscles twitched as if he were unsure whether to linger
or jerk away.
“Your arm is hot,” she said.
“That’s because I’ve been running.”
The girl’s ocean-blue eyes opened wider. “From what?”
He withdrew his arm and flexed his fingers. “Are you from
the Blessed Lands?”
The girl nodded.
“Why would you make such a dangerous voyage alone in such a
small boat?”
“I was in no danger,” she said.
He waved a hand at the flotsam, still surging in the tide.
“But your boat’s destroyed, and it took us to save you.”
“Yes, I suppose.” She looked back out to sea as if expecting
to find her boat still afloat. “Then I thank Lord Kanakunai for sparing me and
delivering me to kind people who would help.”
“But who are you?” Helena said more insistently.
The girl motioned for more to drink, this time grasping the
bottle with both hands and emptying it. When she finished, she sat up and
lifted her chin like royalty. “I am Kailani, the daughter of the sea and the
sky.”
About the Author:
Using two fingers and lots of white-out, he religiously
typed five pages a day throughout
college and well into his twenties. Then life intervened. He paused to raise
two sons and pursue a career, in the process — and without prior plan —
becoming a well-known entrepreneur in the software industry, founding several
successful companies. When he found time again to daydream, the urge to write
returned.
There Comes a Prophet is his first novel in this new stage
of life. His second book, Along the Watchtower, will be available June 2013.
And The Daughter of the Sea and the Sky is nearing completion.
David and his wife split their time between Cape Cod,
Florida and anywhere else that catches their fancy. He no longer limits himself
to five pages a day and is thankful every keystroke for the invention of the
word processor.
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