As Addy’s eyes open, so does the world around her. In the concluding chapter of the Reclamation trilogy, the cast is bigger than ever before…
And so are the problems.
After the devastating events in Magnolia, the group shatters. Addy hightails it off Harkers Island, headed for the QC, a city far inland and far away from her problems. Jack stumbles through his days, a shell of the man he was, with the surety he’ll never recover. When Jane seeks out the Library of Congress with some of the others, he goes because, hell, what else is he going to do?
Back home at the Molehill, the general has to answer for her mistakes in Magnolia; for murder, for being captured, for every choice she’s made the last few years. Her only friend acting cold and distant, she tries to figure out how to move forward, and her conclusion is more aggressive research.
With Addy and Jack’s family teetering on the edge, ready to fly apart at the seams, they’ll both have to make decisions about the general—about stopping her research, about bringing her to justice, about how to forgive her for a lifetime’s worth of cruelty. And if forgiveness is even something any of them want.
The epic conclusion of the Reclamation trilogy is a nonstop roller coaster of the highest highs and lowest lows, a glimpse inside the general’s world, and an ending that will stick with you—and the Cooke family—for years to come.
Praise from readers:
Reclamation:
“If you love horror, romance, action, drama, and following the struggles of people that think like you would in a post society collapse, then this is the book you need to be reading.”
“My cold dark heart was brought to life!”
Reclamation 2: Revolution:
“I love watching all the characters grow… Lots of twists and turns! I absolutely loved this book!”
Bethany grew up in the South, transplanted to the West, and has visited just about anywhere in between. She’s got a day job, and a family, and at night she writes.
Her favorite author is Stephen King, and she owes more than she can explain to Supernatural. No matter the medium, storytelling has held her in thrall for decades. She enjoys travelling down the road of the macabre, but mainly in order to discover the beauty hiding within the human spirit when it is pushed beyond normal boundaries. We face the monsters on the page so we can face the darkness within ourselves, and come out the other side of them both as changed people.
A heart breakingly beautiful finale to a story of life, death, and reanimation. What could I possibly say beyond that that wouldn't give away the varies twist and turns that kept my heart pounding through it all? It's been almost 2 hours and I am still crying tears of joy for the victories well deserved, and sadness for those who never made it back. My only criticism of this series is that there's only three books.
She took the pack and flipped it onto her back. It sat heavy, and something inside shifted and clinked.
“Careful. Don’t want to break it.” He sat on the bike. “So you said you’ve never been on a motorcycle?”
Throwing a leg over the side, she shook her head. “No. What do I do?”
Twisted at the waist, he showed her where to put her feet. “You can hold the back of the bike. Or the bottom of the seat. Or, um” —he cleared his throat— “you can hold me. Um. My waist. Here.” He tapped the side of his hip. Red rushing up his cheeks, he hurried on. “When we go around corners, don’t fight it. Lean with me. If you can’t do that, sit as still as you can and let me drive. OK?”
She nodded. “Is this dangerous?”
The parentheses turned up. “Yes.” He raised the kick stand.
Under the roar of the engine, she couldn’t hear herself say “good.” Holding the seat, she leaned back. As they rode out of town, the wind blew in her face.