The Water Sign by C. S. Samulski

Cover_TheWaterSign

The Water Sign by C. S. Samulski
Publisher: Booktrope Publishing
Genre: Science Fiction
Length: Full (392 pgs)
Rating: 5 stars
Review by Poppy

The teachers taught us how to kill and made us dream for death. It is the only place the Struggle leads. And even it was a lie.

I am too old to be a child. Still too young to be a soldier. But I am trapped as both.

My name is Ayax, though some call me the Water Sign – and this is the story of how I died so that the world might live. In a future torn apart by catastrophic climate change, biological warfare, and geopolitical upheaval, corporations have taken over the role of nation states. Protected by the re-purposed United Nations and their dreaded Peacekeepers, these corporations and their mercenary armies wage endless wars across all that remains of civilization. And hidden in this chaos, someone or something is stealing children and programming them to fight. The warriors that emerge at age fourteen are vicious and unlike any the world has ever seen.

Exploited by his teachers, and pursued by others who would use him for their own ends, Ayax must navigate our dystopian future filled with treachery, unlikely allies and forbidden AI technology. Is he the Water Sign as the Kafkari believe he is, or merely another experimental weapon?

Existence is stressful sufficient presently, but when cash viagra samples for sale challenges are factored in, many marriages arrive apart at the seams. These are viagra prices in usa as followed, Shortage of Vitamin B-12 Lack of sufficient sleep Intake of drugs, alcohol and prescription medications Anesthesia utilized throughout surgical treatment Radiation, chemotherapy and bone marrow transplant carried out throughout cancer treatment Some sort of head injury Limited circulation of oxygen to brain Infection or brain tumor Mental illness Stress, depression, and anxiety Thyroid dysfunction Ways to deal with bad memory? When it concerns boost memory power, we are not offered. Herbal medicines are being used since the centuries for the diseases stating from the mild stomache pain to the severe diseases like cancer so now has been proved as the best for skin and sex related problems as per the report of researches. generic cialis sample For treating these condition pills cialis generic tadalafil http://www.learningworksca.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/LWBrief_ChangingEquationsSummary_WEB.pdf are consumed and men without ED use medicines to enhance their sexual performance. While this isn’t the usual book I choose to review, sometimes I take a leap outside the norm and stretch my wings a bit. I wasn’t sure what to expect with this and have to say, I was pretty blown away by the story.

This isn’t an easy read, or a quick one. The world building and the plot are incredibly complex and require full attention in order to process and understand just exactly what is going on. Even with that attention, there were times I felt just a bit lost.

There’s quite a mix of different things here: religion, politics, love … there are mentions of Elohim and Buddha, of countries like the United States or major cities like Paris and Tokyo. Even the UN exists. But all familiarity ends with the words for those things (except perhaps the UN which is very similar to my perception of how it works currently).

Interestingly, Ayax didn’t feel male to me at the beginning. Even with the clear indications of his gender, he felt softer than a male. Perhaps because the females in this story are not particularly soft, so the distinction between genders isn’t as well defined. As time and pages passed, however, Ayax became quite certainly male. There is even the currently popular and seemingly requisite love triangle here.

If you’re at all politically aware, you’ll find much about this story — set on a future earth — that will resonate with today’s society. It’s a bit frightening, but perhaps something we can all learn from. When I saw this was the author’s debut novel, I was honestly surprised. His prose is polished and I didn’t see many of the “rookie” mistakes many first time novelists make.

Overall, The Water Sign was impressive. Perhaps not a perfect story as there were some inconsistencies and a few times when the narrative was a bit too description and lacking action so my attention wandered. But even so, it’s very worthy of 5 solid stars.

Comments

  1. Thank you for hosting

  2. Sounds very intriguing.

  3. Hi potential commenters. I’ll be checking back in periodically to reply to people here and answer Qs your have for me.

    I’ll also be handing out an ebook of Terry Persun’s Revision 7 at the end of the day to one random commenter.

  4. Thanks for such a great review!

  5. Sounds interesting

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  6. Mary Preston says

    I don’t read a lot of science fiction, but I am rather curious.

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  7. I just finished the book, and I’m not quite sure how I feel about it. I think you summed it up perfectly in your review.

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  8. Wow, impressive five star review. Congrats!

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