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Social unrest, disease, and environmental vectors we currently hold at bay have torn apart the country, perhaps the world. Two people fight to survive, one walking a many-mile trail for home, the other a woman who has survived the killing of her husband and daughter. Their path through alarms and attacks while they build hayricks and celebrate their love of music and literature is Catchfly's story. They probe flamenco and Purcell's haunting "Rondeau," while scavengers hunt them. This is a near-future that has none. Set in the Poconos and Central Pennsylvania.

Produktbeschreibung
Social unrest, disease, and environmental vectors we currently hold at bay have torn apart the country, perhaps the world. Two people fight to survive, one walking a many-mile trail for home, the other a woman who has survived the killing of her husband and daughter. Their path through alarms and attacks while they build hayricks and celebrate their love of music and literature is Catchfly's story. They probe flamenco and Purcell's haunting "Rondeau," while scavengers hunt them. This is a near-future that has none. Set in the Poconos and Central Pennsylvania.
Autorenporträt
Harlan Berger is a retired science writer (Penn State) who has written for the Centre Daily Times and the Lock Haven Express newspapers. For the Express, he wrote for eight years a weekly column. He is co-author of the Prentice-Hall text "Handball." He was one of the founders of "Research/ Penn State," the University's science magazine.He, his wife Shirley who gave him the Catchfly title, and their sons, Brian and David, lived for twenty-some years in the 1833 Simon Pickle fieldstone house, located in Madisonburg, PA. The home is on the National Register of Historic Places.