David Millett

David Millett

About

David Millett is retired from a long career in the Information Technology industry. He was there in the beginning, when computers first became personal.
David has a passion for science, travel, hiking, flying, skiing, and writing. He keeps a journal of his travels at his living book: www.davidmillett.net. And he regularly writes travel articles for the Examiner.com.

The Seekers: The Stuff of Stars (Dystopian Sci-Fi - Book 2)

The Seekers: The Stuff of Stars (Dystopian Sci-Fi - Book 2)

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<p>This second book in <em>The Seekers</em> dystopian series continues the story started in the critically-acclaimed <em>The Children of Darkness</em>, winner of the <strong>Pinnacle Book Achievement Award, Summer 2015 - Best Book in the Category of SCIENCE FICTION</strong>, and winner of the <strong>Awesome Indies Seal of Excellence</strong>....</p><h1><strong><em>The Stuff of Stars</em> by David Litwack</strong></h1><p>Evolved Publishing presents the second book in the new dystopian series <em>The Seekers</em>. [DRM-Free]</p><h2><em style="font-size:13px;line-height:1.6em;">“But what are we without dreams?”</em></h2><p>Against all odds, Orah and Nathaniel have found the keep and revealed the truth about the darkness, initiating what they hoped would be a new age of enlightenment. But the people were more set in their ways than anticipated, and a faction of vicars whispered in their ears, urging a return to traditional ways.</p><p>Desperate to keep their movement alive, Orah and Nathaniel cross the ocean to seek the living descendants of the keepmasters’ kin. Those they find on the distant shore are both more and less advanced than expected.</p><p>The seekers become caught between the two sides, and face the challenge of bringing them together to make a better world. The prize: a chance to bring home miracles and a more promising future for their people. But if they fail this time, they risk not a stoning but losing themselves in the twilight of a never-ending dream.</p><p><strong>Be sure to start with the first book in this series, the multiple award-winning <em>The Children of Darkness</em>. And don't miss David's award-winning speculative saga, <em>The Daughter of the Sea and the Sky</em></strong></p>

Story Behind The Book

Julia Buss is author of Your Care Plan, a nurse’s guide to healthy living, and co-author of Flying the Edge of America, the trip of a lifetime. She is a registered nurse, who also graduated from Brown University with a degree in English and American literature. Julia blogs about health and diet at www.juliacbuss.wordpress.com. She is married, and lives in California.

Reviews

<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="line-height:17px;font-family:Calibri, sans-serif;font-size:15px;">S. Marie Vernon, Pacific Book Review<br /></span><br /><em>The Black Nightingale </em>is Mary Seacole, a true heroine of the <em>Crimean War </em>and British History<em>.<span></span></em>Author Julia Buss has captured her remarkable spirit, her determination, and her amazing courage in the face of adversity that threatened to keep her from her life’s mission; that of saving lives. This story walked me right onto the battlefields during the mid-18<sup><font size="1">th</font></sup>century along with Mary.<span></span>Julia Buss’s writing enabled me to visualize and feel the unconditional love, the deep compassion and the devotion this black Jamaican nurse had for humanity; especially the wounded and dying soldiers.<span></span>As Mary Seacole often risked her own life to save the men engaged in this war, her courageous character became truly inspirational.<span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal">Mary Seacole was a proud, compassionate and accomplished Jamaican woman.<span></span>When following the news of the <em>Crimean War</em> and the illnesses plaguing the soldiers, she traveled from Jamaica to London’s War Office to offer her medical expertise and nursing services.<span></span>There she waited patiently, to serve as a member of the war nursing team, alongside Florence Nightingale who was going to the Crimean, a Ukrainian peninsula between the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov.<span></span>Rejected for service by the War Office and by Florence Nightingale herself, Mary was not deterred from finding a way to serve the sick, wounded and dying men.<span></span>She, along with a dear friend, Thomas Day, independently traveled to the town of <em>Balaklava</em>, a mere two miles from the siege.<span></span>Mary chose her location carefully, because she knew many wounded would never survive the long trip to Nightingale’s military hospital.<span></span>There, Mary and Thomas set up hospital beds and a clinic in the <em>British Hotel</em>. <span></span>When the men could not come to her, Mary courageously went to them; even in the mist of battle. </p><p class="MsoNormal">In <em>Black Nightingale</em>, Julia Buss has mastered a great historical piece of literature.<span></span>Written in a third-person narrative format, she brought to life the harsh realities of the world’s first war whose tragedies were openly reported to the public. <span></span>To a greater degree, this novel is perfectly timed nowadays to support the ongoing efforts in London and the United Kingdom to bring recognition to one of London’s most courageous, remarkable, and deserving black citizens;<span></span>Mary Seacole. <span></span>London is currently raising funds for a War Memorial Statue to honor Mrs. Seacole and to preserve in history the many contributions she made to health care and to the military field services. The memorial statue, along with this wonderful story of Mary Seacole, will bring a long overdue tribute to honor this great lady; acknowledging her fighting spirit and the selfless service she, so freely, gave to the British forces whom had rejected her. <span></span>As a nurse herself, Julia Buss created her novel, <em>Black Nightingale</em>, to justly join the efforts to preserve Mary Seacole’s memory in our society today, as well as in history for generations to come.<span></span> </p>