Book Details
Description
The narrative unfolds the story of individuals tasked with the solemn duty of governing who lives and who dies. As they navigate their complex responsibilities, they confront moral dilemmas and ethical conflicts that question the very fabric of their society. Each choice they make reverberates far beyond their immediate environment, echoing through the lives of countless others.
Amidst the backdrop of this new reality, characters grapple with themes of mortality, legacy, and the cost of immortality. The authors weave a tapestry of richly developed personas whose journeys—marked by love, loss, and discovery—illuminate the struggles inherent in their extraordinary circumstances.
As the tale progresses, readers are invited to ponder profound questions about life, the nature of power, and the value of existence itself. With a blend of suspense and philosophical introspection, they become immersed in a world where living forever isn't the unimaginable blessing it once appeared to be.
Genres
Reviews
View All4.5 starsThe greatest achievement of the human race was not conquering death. It was ending government.First book of 2021 finished
This is the 10th book I've read in 2 and a half weeks and probably the most entertaining and fun book out of them all.I wasn't expecting to love this anywhere near as much as I did. Like normal, I went in mostly blind, but from page 1, I was hooked.The premise, the plot, the world, it was all so unique compared to what I normally read and I just loved it.I see some negative reviews about a few things, most don't apply to my enjoyment of books. One complaint was about the romance in the book but knowing what 16yr olds are like, it made sense.Honestly, it's not a perfect book, there a little plot holes (which could be fixed in later books) and a couple contradictions but I genuinely enjoyed this book too much for those to take away from the star rating for me. And that doesn't happen often.