A Japanese fishing vessel freezes mid-swell. Birds fall from the sky like shards of glass. Entire continents vanish beneath a silent, lethal cold. In a matter of hours, three-quarters of Earth is locked in a flash-frozen death grip—except for one perfectly circular region stretching across the Americas.
No one understands why the devastation has stopped there. Or who—or what—drew the line.
In the Dominican Republic, nine-year-old Maya Ellis stands barefoot on the beach, staring at the the ocean has stopped moving. Waves are locked mid-crash. The horizon has split in two—on one side, sunlit sea; on the other, a wall of dark, frozen desolation creeping closer by the hour. Maya has seen this before—in her dreams. And she knows what’s coming next.
Her father, Graham Ellis, a NASA thermal engineer on vacation with his family, is abruptly recalled to Kennedy Space Center. There, he joins a desperate coalition of scientists, military minds, and world leaders trying to comprehend the nature of the phenomenon they've dubbed The Boundary—a perfectly symmetrical, planetary-scale thermal cutoff where temperatures outside drop to minus one hundred degrees Fahrenheit in an instant, and nothing survives.
Inside the warmth, sunlight, breathable air. Outside stillness, silence, and death.
But the laws of nature don’t draw straight lines across oceans, nor do they bend solar radiation to spare select regions of the globe. The implications are clear—and The Boundary is not natural. It's a design.
As Earth’s top minds race to model the boundary’s physics and monitor the shrinking sun, Maya continues to whisper impossible things—about a second sun, about hunger in the sky, and about a circle that won’t hold forever. Her warnings suggest something even worse than a presence watching from beyond the stars.
Boundary is a gripping, atmospheric techno-thriller blending apocalyptic suspense with high-concept science fiction. For fans of The Day After Tomorrow, The Three-Body Problem, and Interstellar, this is a chilling tale of survival, cosmic mystery, and the race to save a dying world from a force beyond imagination.
Librarian Note: There are several authors in the GoodReads database with this name. This profile will contain more than one author. Those listed below have multiple books listed on GoodReads.
David Lambert (2 spaces): editor of reference books, Diagram Group David Lambert (3 spaces): Christian author David Lambert (4 spaces): British educator with a focus on geography, on faculty at the Institute of Education in London David Lambert (5 spaces): British author who writes about parks and gardens around England David Lambert (6 spaces): Educator on faculty at Université de Toulouse David Lambert (7 spaces): Scottish novelist (and union leader) of the 50s David Lambert (8 spaces): British educator of history with a focus on the Caribbean, on faculty at the University of Warwick