Dan Edgars starts seeing visions of the future, prophetic images foretelling dire conditions concerning those around him. Can he forestall the future he witnesses, or is he merely hallucinating, slowly losing his mind? Either way, his visions are either real or they aren’t, but they certainly seem to be accurate.If they’re not real, can he silence them? And if they are, is the future predetermined, or can he use his observations to affect a change in the dire future playing out around him?He’s joined by Alison Ford and Laura Wells, whom he met by accident—sort of. They draw him out and are quickly enmeshed in his world, helping him seek out answers, while documenting his condition. They’re forced to ask whether they’re actually helping or compromising their own futures in trying to help someone they barely know.
Vincent Berg (1957) was born in New Jersey but, being a military dependent, grew up on 'more or less the East Coast'. Working in Systems Engineering in the Financial Services in Chicago and New York City, he never considered himself a writer, but after retiring and moving closer to his family, he wanted to explore the kinds of books he enjoyed.
His writings aren't typical, with the writing style harking back to the early twentieth Century, and the stories being complex and meandering. Without action heroes, antiheroes or even clear conflicts, the stories are more character based, as the central characters try to figure out where they are and where they're going. The reader gets sucked along, as they try to piece together where they fit in the world.
His work includes 5 series (ranging from 2 to 6 books), for a total of 16 original books published to date.