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Global warming has reached a tipping point. The President of the United States believes the world will be a better place if split, north and south, by an imaginary border that protects the wealth of his powerful friends from a resource hungry world. Imported goods will have massive tariffs, with technology exports equally overpriced, and all immigration will be banned. While the planet starves, a pandemic takes its toll and nuclear war looms. The imaginary border, known as The Second Meridian, is only one part of his plan. Another is to send hundreds of handpicked elites into space, to orbit…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Global warming has reached a tipping point. The President of the United States believes the world will be a better place if split, north and south, by an imaginary border that protects the wealth of his powerful friends from a resource hungry world. Imported goods will have massive tariffs, with technology exports equally overpriced, and all immigration will be banned. While the planet starves, a pandemic takes its toll and nuclear war looms. The imaginary border, known as The Second Meridian, is only one part of his plan. Another is to send hundreds of handpicked elites into space, to orbit in pods for the duration of the impending war, before returning to rebuild. One pod inadvertently leaves orbit, and with nowhere to go, the crew-five males and five females-must make the best of their supplies or take the self-destruct option. As they enter deep space the nuclear war erupts, and they cannot return. With gravity drawing them closer to the sun, they must ponder their fate. What freak of nature will help them survive?
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Autorenporträt
Dan Cotton, AKA Phil Mayne, spent the first fifteen years of his working life travelling the world with the Grey Funnel Line (Royal Navy). He then joined the world of commerce and pretty much carried on travelling as before. In the eighties, he started a business that eventually listed on the Stock Exchange and delisted in 1989 after the crash of 1987. He didn't make much money, but he learned the hard way, about the underbelly of high-end business operations and decided there were better ways to earn a crust.Twelve years in the IT world kept him going until he decided to do his own thing and start an art gallery with a picture framing service. In the event that he doesn't make squillions from his writing, he'll still be framing, painting and writing until he carks it. *Who is Dan Cotton? Sometimes, even he's not sure. He's one of those folks who, no matter where they are in the world, will always be mistaken for someone else.*Having written nothing more than business proposals and letters, he started on his first manuscript and soon realised he badly needed help. That's when he joined the Katharine Susannah Prichard Writing Centre (WA) and, with encouragement and critique from KSP's Thursday Night Group, he has been able to complete 11 full length Novels and three Short Story Anthologies.*For twenty years, He's been a member of a team who compete annually in the Open Section of "Write A Book In A Day" [www.writeabookinaday.com]. This is a national competition aimed at improving child literacy while raising funds for children's cancer research. Several of the team's entries have been winners, or highly commended, and have since been privately published. Not only is it a hard day's slog it's one of the best ways of testing one's writing, and Dan wouldn't miss it for quids.