• Complain

Ray Gorham - Daunting Days of Winter

Here you can read online Ray Gorham - Daunting Days of Winter full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. genre: Romance novel. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

Ray Gorham Daunting Days of Winter

Daunting Days of Winter: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Daunting Days of Winter" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Ray Gorham: author's other books


Who wrote Daunting Days of Winter? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Daunting Days of Winter — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Daunting Days of Winter" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Ray Gorham, Jodi Gorham

Daunting Days of Winter

PROLOGUE

Daunting Days of Winter picks up the story where 77 Days in September, originally released in May of 2011, leaves off. 77 Days in September is the story of Kyle and Jennifer Tait, an ordinary couple surviving extraordinary circumstances.

Kyle, a supervisor with an electrical power company, has been in Houston helping with recovery after a major hurricane. As he prepares to fly home to Montana, terrorists launch a massive EMP strike against the continental United States, successfully destroying the electrical and computer infrastructure of the nation. Kyles plane crashes upon take-off, and he barely escapes the burning wreckage, only to find himself stranded in a country where technology has been wiped out and modern-day people are left struggling to survive in a primitive world.

Forced to devise a plan to get himself home, and with the help of a fellow airplane survivor, Kyle builds a handcart to haul the meager supplies he needs to attempt the 2,000-mile journey from Texas to Montana on foot.

Across the country, Jennifer and their children, David, Emma and Spencer, face unimaginable challenges of their own. With no power, communication, or modern conveniences, life in rural Montana is not as carefree as the family is used to. Grocery stores are looted, doctors are unavailable, and law enforcement is unreliable, if not nonexistent. The residents of the Taits small community band together to deal with the new reality in which they live, forming councils and structure, but quickly realizing that life will be far more difficult than any of them care to imagine.

While Jennifer toils to protect and provide for their family, Kyle and his handcart slowly move northward. He encounters stranded motorists, hostile gangs, highway bandits, and extreme weather conditions that threaten his safety and his very life. But he also finds evidence that, despite the dire circumstances, goodness and mercy still exist. In neighboring Wyoming, Kyle is saved from certain death by Rose Duncan, an attractive and independent woman isolated from her family and with whom Kyle quickly bonds, testing his resolve and his dedication to his family to the extreme.

With Kyle completing the last leg of his journey home, Jennifers trials escalate and her familys safety is threatened after she repeatedly rebuffs the unwanted advances of Doug, the local law enforcement officer whose sanity and stability are slipping away. At Dougs mercy, Jennifer faces violence and assault during a series of events that culminate in the death of Doug and the potentially fatal stabbing of the Taits son, David, leaving Kyle to return to an empty, blood-stained home before finally reuniting with his family.

Daunting Days of Winter begins the day of Kyles miraculous reunion with his family and takes you further into the experience of post-EMP America. Enjoy the adventure.

1859

The impact of an EMP on the modern world would change life beyond imagination for the average civilized person. It would take us back to a time before electricity, computer chips, and satellite communication. It would take us back to a year like 1859.

In the century and a half since 1859, the world has seen change on a scale inconceivable to any previous generation of people. Weve progressed from man, wind, and animal powered forms of transportation, to cars, airplanes, nuclear submarines, and space shuttles. Health and medicine have progressed from bleedings and wooden teeth to heart transplants, genetic engineering, and brain surgery. The availability of knowledge has transitioned from elementary primers that remained current for decades, to computer tablets that store thousands of books, update daily, and show live video feeds from around the world.

And yet, the citizens of 1859 saw change as well. Trains began to challenge steamboats for commercial superiority, electrification was being developed (though the first public generating station wouldnt be built until 1881), dental hygiene improved with the patent of the toothbrush in 1857, and medical and scientific breakthroughs were occurring at a breakneck pace around the globe.

For the average citizen, however, everyday life wasnt much different from what it had been when Columbus crossed the oceans or King Arthurs knights roamed the countryside. Life expectancy was just over forty years for a newborn child, three in ten children died before the age of fifteen, and a woman who bore eight children (a common family size for those times due to the manpower needed for the family farm and ineffective birth control) stood a better than ten percent chance of dying during childbirth. Two-thirds of all men worked as farmers, clearing the land, sowing by hand, and herding the animals, as well as helping to provide the local defense. These farmers were supported by a spouse who, in addition to helping in the fields, spent a large portion of her day cooking, sewing, teaching, mending, washing, hauling water, doctoring children and animals, gardening, and taking the wagon to the general store.

Compared to today, life was difficult and challenging in a host of ways. The Oregon Trail was the transcontinental highway of the time, having been used, at that point, by nearly 400,000 brave pioneers who walked or rode in a wagon across the continent, many who would end up buried in unmarked graves along the way. That same trail would continue to be used for another decade by immigrants heading for Oregon, California, Utah, and other places in the West, until the first transcontinental railway was completed in 1869.

Bank robbers and highway bandits plied their trade during these years with relative immunity, escaping afterwards into the unmapped and uninhabited countryside or to towns where word of their deeds hadnt reached. On those occasions when the law did catch up with these outlaws, justice was swift and harsh, and often at the end of a hangmans noose.

Diets were bland and variety was limited. Farm animals provided the protein, supplemented mainly by whatever could be grown locally, usually corn, potatoes, apples, grains, and a few other staples. Soups and breads were regularly served in most households, while ice cream, chocolate, potato chips, and Coca Cola either hadnt been created yet or were such luxuries that the average person had never experienced them.

Clothing was typically handmade and passed down from one child to the next, and furs were often worn out of practicality, not as a fashion statement.

Mail delivery was slow, unreliable, and inefficient, making long distance communication difficult. The Pony Express, offering Missouri to California delivery in the unbelievable time span of just ten days and achieved by way of 120 riders using 400 horses and covering 1,900 miles, wouldnt begin its eighteen months of operation until the next year, in April of 1860.

Politically, James Buchannan was president, Oregon was admitted into the Union, and a fifty-year old lawyer named Abraham Lincoln was building his reputation as a presidential candidate. An English naturalist named Charles Darwin, who few in America had heard of, published a book proposing a radical theory on the origin of species. And John Brown, a militant reformer, tossed a proverbial match into the gas can of slavery by way of a failed uprising at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, paying with his life just six weeks later at the conclusion of a short trial.

One other event from 1859 also deserves mention. On September 1st of that year, Robert Carrington, while watching the sky from his private observatory in London, observed a flare on the sun of such unusual brightness and intensity that he diagramed and made note of the event. For the next two days after the flare, the world was awash in unusual phenomena. Northern Lights, observed as far south as Jamaica, were so bright in parts of America that tradesmen, lacking watches and alarm clocks, went to work thinking it was morning, and people across the Northern Hemisphere believed neighboring towns to be on fire. Even birds were fooled into thinking that it was daytime and began singing during the night.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Daunting Days of Winter»

Look at similar books to Daunting Days of Winter. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Daunting Days of Winter»

Discussion, reviews of the book Daunting Days of Winter and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.