Könyv The Fourth Silence Christina Clayton

The Fourth Silence

The Name That Keeps One Alive

Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Várható készletfeltöltés
Küldés 19. 07. 2026
5 874 Ft
The world has been liberated. But freedom has not healed it.The false order has fallen. Synchron is...

Információk a könyvről

Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
284
EAN
9798196363986
Enbook ID
53245111
Súly
285
Méretek
127 x 203 x 16

Teljes leírás

The world has been liberated. But freedom has not healed it.

The false order has fallen. Synchron is broken. The Emerald Storm has passed, and the people once bound inside a single will are beginning, painfully, to remember their own names.

Yet victory has left a wound deeper than any battlefield.

Illan, the one who shattered the Hive and opened the way beyond the old captivity, has become something both necessary and terrifying. Clearer. Colder. More exact. In saving the world from one form of domination, he has moved dangerously close to becoming an instrument of another kind of order-one without cruelty, perhaps, but also without warmth, frailty, or mercy.

Aelita sees it. Thorn fears it. And the deeper they descend beneath the liberated world, the more the ancient foundations of reality seem to recognize Illan not as a man, but as a principle.

Their path leads into the Middle Halls, where stone remembers what men forget, where names must be held alive against dissolution, and where no one may pass by power alone. In hidden cities, monasteries of memory, forgotten stairways, and chambers older than command, the Brotherhood must face a truth more dangerous than any tyrant:

A person can survive the fall of darkness and still lose himself.

As the road draws them toward the Threshold of Infallible Stone and the Citadel of the First Fracture, Illan must confront not merely enemies, but perfected versions of himself, visions of what he might become if he chooses purity over love, certainty over compassion, and salvation over the living freedom of imperfect souls.

For Aelita, the task is no longer only to follow him.

It is to keep him human.

For Thorn, repentance is no longer memory alone, but a burden that must still speak.

And for Illan, the deepest trial is not whether he can save the world.

It is whether, after all he has endured, there remains within him a name by which he can still be called alive.

The Name That Keeps One Alive is a dark, lyrical epic of freedom, memory, identity, and the terrible cost of becoming necessary. A story for readers who love philosophical fantasy, spiritual depth, mythic atmosphere, and journeys where the greatest danger is not defeat, but perfection without a soul.