Jeremiah's memory is gone, yet when he discovers a dead KGB agent in his apartment he finds himself fleeing the only life he knew.
As far as twenty-year-old Jeremiah's concerned, his life vanished seven years ago with the fevers that nearly killed him and wiped his memory. But with the illness came a strange new gift—the ability to hear the thoughts of others.
Only when Jeremiah comes home from work to discover a dead KGB agent does he find himself fleeing the only life he knew.
Trying to evade a past he cannot remember, his escape catapults him into a world involving covert military operations, missing Soviet-era explosives and a two-thousand-year-old prophecy that predicted his birth.
USA TODAY bestselling author, M.A. Rothman, is one of the most unlikely novelists you'll ever meet. He's an engineer first and foremost, with a background in the sciences, and somehow or another, this writing habit of his has turned into a bit more than just a run-of-the-mill hobby.
He primarily writes stories that focus on two things: technology and international intrigue. This writing tends to span the genres of science fiction, techno-thriller, and mainstream thrillers.
When not writing, he enjoys cooking, learning about new technology, travel, and spending time with his family.
Marvelous story, EXCEPT for your stupid code crap. Why did it have to go on and on and on and on and on and on? Flicking pages for most of the friendly (not the friendly word, you guess) book!
I read the first few chapters which convinced me to buy the book. I have to tell you readers that I read the first half of the book while in bed. I couldn’t put the darn book down because it was that good. The story tailed off a little because like a fairy tale it stretched the imagination. I thought the mothers part bordered on the unbelievable, but that aside M.A. Rothman did a wonderful job in making the hero a like able and believable protagonist. This was one of the most enjoyable books I’ve read in a long time.