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Tomorrow's Children - by Daniel Polansky (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- From Hugo Award nominated author comes a high-octane post-apocalyptic romp set in the ruins of Manhattan.
- About the Author: Daniel Polansky is a baker and writer living in Los Angeles.
- 384 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Fantasy
Description
About the Book
Tomorrow, the funk descends on Manhattan, a noxious cloud which separates the island from the rest of the world and mutates the population. Some generations on, the surviving population exists amid the rubble of modernity, wearing our cast-off clothing, worshipping celebrities as dim gods and using emojis in place or written language. The Island exists in a state of uneasy peace, with each neighborhood an independent fiefdom, protecting itself with scrap metal spears and Moloov cocktails.
Book Synopsis
From Hugo Award nominated author comes a high-octane post-apocalyptic romp set in the ruins of Manhattan.
Years ago, Tomorrow - a noxious cloud of funky gas - descended on Manhattan, cutting the island off from the rest of the world and mutating the remaining population.
Now, survivors exist amid the rubble of modernity, wearing cast-off clothing from generations past, worshipping celebrities from the past as ambivalent gods and communicating through roughly drawn emojis. Manhattan exists in a state of delicate balance between neighbourhoods, with each group protecting themselves with Molotov cocktails and scrap metal spears.
But when the first tourist in centuries arrives on the island under mysterious circumstances, the uneasy web tangled between factions is about to unravel...
Frantic and full of anarchy, Tomorrow's Children is a high-octane dystopian tale from Hugo Award nominated author Daniel Polansky.
Review Quotes
"Against the steampunk backdrop, the rebellious attitude of street versus suite comes across loud and clear. This entertaining tale is sure to win fans."
- Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Daniel Polansky is a baker and writer living in Los Angeles. His works include the Low Town trilogy, the Empty Throne duology, A City Dreaming, the 7th Perfection, and the Hugo-nominated novella The Builders.