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The second volume of the Broken and the Dead picks up right where the first one ends. The survivors have just learned that while one living horror has ended, a new one has revealed itself. The aliens who designed and implemented the initial attack have arrived and they are not interested in sharing their new world.
We all must ask crucial questions about our life here on earth. Am I experiencing life the way God, the Master Creator, designed my life to be lived? Or am I living a lesser, devolving life of my own choosing? We, God's ultimate creations, can only understand our purpose in life if we learn to see ourselves through the eyes of our Creator. This book provides practical steps on walking with the Holy Spirit. It will transform your soul if you follow the instructions.
The is book 3 of the Sci-Fi series "The Broken and the Dead" It is offered to assist readers in decoding the substantial Alien Language excerpts found in books 2 and 4. It is actually a rather scholarly work so I apologize if it is a little dry. I wanted it to read just like a Ph.D. dissertation (albeit a rather short one)
The Da-Nah are an ancient, colonial, space faring race. In thirty thousand years they never failed, not once. Then they came here, to Earth. To their horror, the Da-Nah learned just how vicious mankind could be. Now a little more than a century has passed and the Da-Nah are coming back, not to colonize, but to destroy the treacherous humans and set reality to rights.
This book is part of the series of apocalyptic science fiction novels called "The Broken and the Dead". It is being offered to give new insight into the culture and language of the Da-Nah, a space faring race whose knowledge of genetic manipulation has allowed them to focus on those things they find beautiful, what perspectives they hold most dear, what they find to be Da-Nah. There are eleven examples of what the Da-Nah call "beautiful speaking words" or for the humans among us: Poems. Each is presented in syntactical Da-Nah and an English language translation is provided. A small commentary accompanies each of the poems in an attempt to explain why the poems are culturally relevant even after a minimum of twenty thousand years. The Da-Nah are a fascinating people, full of subtleties and nuance and this is reflected by the words they use. I hope that you have as much fun interpreting the poems as I did in translating them from the original Da-Nah script.
"The Broken and the Dead" is the first book in a series of the same name. It is apocalyptic in nature It studies and presents human nature at its best and its worst. Under what conditions, what stressors, do people become just as monstrous as creatures they fear? When does your fellow man become an enemy or a friend?
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