|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewWill you make the perfect sacrifice? The Earth has turned against us. The solution is Worthington's Domes, sealed cities designed to preserve life and give the planet time to heal. Inside Shamut, safety is promised to those willing to abandon the past and forget the stars. Solanis Tailor entered Shamut after a devastating storm tore her world apart, leaving behind the man she loved and the life she knew. Years later, with a daughter to protect and a position of influence within reach, Solanis has convinced herself the trade was worth it. Safety might be enough. But when a voice from her past resurfaces, the cracks in her carefully built life begin to spread. As control slips and secrets rise to the surface, Solanis must confront what she gave up, what she still has to lose, and what it will cost to protect her daughter and their future. Full Product DetailsAuthor: J S ThompsonPublisher: Realitylife Imprint: Realitylife Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.621kg ISBN: 9798998830440Pages: 470 Publication Date: 02 October 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviews★★★★★ ""A spectacular and incredibly imaginative dive into a dystopian future..."" - Readers' Favorite ★★★★★ 9.4/10 ""An ambitious novel full of imagination that tackles climate change, political fanaticism, and the need for leaders to do the right thing."" - Outstanding Creators ""A suspenseful dystopian story with the poetry and imagery of a thriller."" -- Technology, Betrayal, and Survival in a Dystopian Future - Asher Syed for Readers' Favorite There Are No Stars Here by J.S. Thompson follows Solanis Tailor, a communications manager in a post-apocalyptic future where Earth is ravaged by the toxic ""Haze."" After a life-altering accident exposes her brother Greg to the Haze, triggering disturbing mutations and his eventual death, Solanis escapes a collapsing Boston and enters Shamut, one of several high-tech Domes. Over time, she builds a life inside this synthetic city, raising her daughter Gabby while contending with state control, surveillance, and her growing doubts about the Domes' true purpose. Solanis discovers signs that the Domes are failing and that Greg may still be alive beyond their borders. Pressured by underground factions, government agendas, and revelations about Gabby's paternity, Solanis is forced to choose between staying loyal to the Dome system or exposing its fatal flaws, with an escalating fight to rescue her daughter and dismantle the Dome system by deactivating the BlackBox that sustains it. There Are No Stars Here by J.S. Thompson is a tightly controlled, fast-moving story that is a spectacular and incredibly imaginative dive into a dystopian future. The writing is well executed, with enough descriptive elements to depict time and space while still keeping each scene focused. Thompson builds a world where technology has become a form of confinement, a phenomenon that is believable, and with a government, rules, and customs that are fully realized. I like Solanis Tailor and the situations that Thompson puts her through, from the outside world and within, moving through flooded tunnels, or being placed in a quasi-luxurious cell. There are quite a few twists and shocking betrayals, all of which are well-timed reveals that are a testament to Thompson's skill as a writer. Despite the scale of the setting, its size, and the nod to this turning into a series, the story never loses track of the large cast of characters. Overall, this is a welcome addition to the post-apocalyptic genre and will be embraced by readers who enjoy the likes of DuPrau's The City of Ember and Howey's Wool. Author InformationJ.S. Thompson is a political storyteller who writes about power, sacrifice, and survival, inspired by his work in politics and advocacy. He lives near Washington, D.C. with too many plants, plotting how we might survive the coming dystopia. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |