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Sheltered

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“A year and six days underground without sunlight or breeze or contact with the world above—whatever might be left of the world above. A year and six days without touch, without unrecorded voice, without contact, without friends or family. If only they had listened, if only they had been ready. But he—he had prepared. He was Reginald B. Wakefield, and he hadn’t died. A wave of vindication washed over him, lifting and sweeping away all doubt and fear. He had been right. He raised his eyes again to the hatch cover above. . . . He had been right.”In “Sheltered,” the timely and popular short story by Quent Cordair, a man follows his own course in response to fears of impending disaster and societal breakdown. The story is included in Quent Cordair's *Lunch Break* collection of short stories and poems, now available on Amazon.

36 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 28, 2011

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About the author

Quent Cordair

11 books43 followers
Quent Cordair was born in 1964 in southern Illinois. Raised in an insular fundamentalist religion, the local library became a treasured gateway to the outside world. After serving in the U.S. Marine Corps, he taught himself how to paint and soon began taking portrait commissions to support his writing. His first short story, “A Prelude to Pleasure,” was published by The Atlantean Press Review in 1991. In 1996, Quent Cordair Fine Art opened in Burlingame, California. Now located in Jackson, Wyoming, the gallery represents the work of thirty Romantic Realist painters and sculptors. The author’s acclaimed novels, short stories, poetry, and screenplays are drawn from a lifetime of experience and interest in adventure, romance, history, philosophy, and art. Quent lives and works in Jackson with his wife, Linda, who manages the gallery when the couple aren’t hiking or fishing with their labradoodle, Sophie, or traveling to dote on their granddaughters, Ella, Everly, Emerson, and Harlow.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for chucklesthescot.
3,000 reviews135 followers
May 13, 2017
For a year and six days, a man has been locked inside a nuclear bunker in his garden. He had been working inside the shelter when the blast was seen on the horizon and he has been here alone without his wife and kids for over a year. Now he thinks it might be safe to open the door and see if anything is left of the world he knew.

The book takes place inside the shelter as Reginald starts to run out of food and fuel and conditions inside are getting grim. He thinks back to events before the blast when he was starting to build the shelter and prep for the worst while his own family thought he was crazy. He remembers how determined he was to hide the secret from the neighbours so he wasn't forced to take them in in case of disaster. He thinks about the decision to build it himself so that no builders knew what the shelter was, and the way the project caused him to drift apart from his family.

We get flashbacks to show how Reginald developed his project, showing his fights with his son who wants to tell friends about the shelter, and his wife who has no interest in going into the shelter to test it out. He gradually becomes obsessed with the project and the family dynamic starts to slowly break down. There are also flashes forward to the lonely Reginald realising that he didn't build it well enough and being convinced that his family are dead. With his health getting worse is it safe to go back outside?

I enjoyed reading the book and seeing how the threat of the end of the world affected one normal man and his family. The book was entertaining and I LOVED the ending so much! I did guess what was happening but it did not spoil my enjoyment of this short story and it was so well written. It goes through how a new prepper might go about things but there are lessons to learn here about how NOT to go about things. It has a good mixture of prepping and humour.

I recommend this to anyone who enjoys a good apocalypse story.
Profile Image for Quent Cordair.
Author 11 books43 followers
April 24, 2012
This is the paperback version of the popular Kindle edition. I'm pleased with the quality of the printing. Makes for good stocking stuffers or for introduction to my fiction. Bulk supplies available at a nominal cost for teachers of English-lit classes. It's the kind of thought-provoking story I loved reading in junior-high and high-school English.
Profile Image for Tara.
803 reviews18 followers
June 6, 2012
There was nothing bad about this novella, and nothing outstandingly good, either. The pacing was decent if sometimes a little too fast. The story was one we've seen hundreds of times, or at least enough times that the 'surprise ending' is missing the 'surprise.' Overall it's not a bad read but there's a lot more out there to spend your time on.
Profile Image for B.E..
Author 20 books61 followers
April 24, 2012
Gripping cautionary tale with a interesting twist at the end. Definitely worth reading.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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