Clara is out of prison, out of Broc and finally home. Now that she is officially a Code Red deviant, she has to rebuild her life—which isn’t as simple as it sounds. There are exams to take, enemies to avoid, family to protect and a criminal record to drag around with her. Life as a Code Red is looking rather bleak.
And then an anonymous letter arrives.
The letter contains six names. Six names of six people Clara doesn’t even know—but which will force her to make yet another life-changing decision. A decision with higher stakes and greater costs than any she has faced before.
And suddenly, life as a Cod Red is looking rather dangerous.
PJ King is a creator of stories, writer, and self-published author—who hatches narratives in the Grey Woods, in the English Countryside. Sometimes these narratives become fully-fledged books.
The YA dystopian trilogy: DIVINITY LAWS is available to read now on Amazon and other ebook stores.
THE DIVINITY LAWS (Divinity Laws, #1) DEVIANTS (Divinity Laws, #2) THE ASSEMBLY (Divinity Laws, #3)
In ‘The Assembly’, the final book of the trilogy, the State and its main protagonist is closing in on Clara’s new hiding place and the secret organisation that protects her. From the beginning of this book, the story is complicated by the introduction of a series of gruesome events that lead to an unlikely and uneasy alliance. What follows is such a whirlwind of interrelated occurrences that it needs a clear mind and disciplined hand to keep up with the plot, such is the impulse generated to get to the final page. No one is spared in this final book, not the protagonists, not the Assembly nor our long- suffering heroine. Lives are irrevocably changed, secrets exposed, loyalties determined and mysteries finally unravelled. But the big question is, will the reader be able to identify the message that runs consistently though all three volumes; a message so understated that, unless all ones senses are fully engaged throughout the real purpose of these volumes will remain hidden.
The 3rd and last in the trilogy had about it a divine tension for me, I wanted to hurry through it, hoping for the right outcome, but I really couldn't bare to rush as I just wanted it to go on and on and on. These characters had become very personal to me and I didn't want to part company with them. I really need to read more from this author, they don't just write a story, they bring back the English language in all its glory with such intelligence conveying situations with such empathy and insight and maybe this is a prophetic warning for what may lay ahead for future generations. Brilliantly written - want to see this played out on the big screen, please!