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“Gardener of The
World” puts the reader in the midst of the diverse ways
individuals, families and communities might choose to react to a
sudden, unthinkable natural disaster. It portrays the spectrum of human
emotions from destructive to constructive and from tragedy to
laughter.
Sean O'Brien is a
retired engineer living off-grid with his family, near a small farm
village in Michigan. Sean and his friend Tom, both amateur radio
operators, know just enough about solar weather to recognize the
profound scale and gravity of a power outage occurring one clear day
in March. A solar, coronal mass ejection (CME) has stripped all
modern conveniences from a modern society. It forces Sean to make
critical decisions fortified by the eternal wisdom of his wife Kate
and the sagacious humor of his daughter-in-law Ling. Their
relationship with the nearby village of South Branch begins to
develop though long-standing traditions and innovative adaptations
toward survival in stark contrast to the choices of others outside
the little community. Violence threatens the family and the village
on separate occasions but they deal with it in their own way.
Good-natured bonds
begin to develop between the family and village residents as they
set forth to use their traditions, wits, and resourcefulness to
attempt to endure as much as a year without electricity or any
outside assistance.
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