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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Book 3 in a masterful what-if series in which global catastrophe puts a family's very survival at risk—and both reveals the darkness in human hearts and lights the way to restoration.

Now eight months into a global blackout, the residents of Oak Hollow are trying to cope with the deep winter nights and a gnawing hunger from a food shortage. The struggle to survive can bring out the worst in anyone.

A teenage friend of the Brannings' has been found shot while hunting, and his slain deer is gone. Suspicions immediately fall on Mark Green, the son of a convicted murderer. Before he can prove his innocence, vigilantes force the sheriff to arrest him.

Deni Branning is growing closer to Mark, and she sees him as a hero, not a traitor. She and her family set out to find the person who really pulled the trigger. But clearing Mark's reputation is only part of the battle. Protecting him from the neighbors who ostracized him is just as difficult.

New York Times bestselling suspense author Terri Blackstock weaves a masterful what-if novel in which global catastrophe reveals the darkness in human hearts—and lights the way to restoration for a self-centered world.

  • Full-length suspense novel
  • Part of the Restoration series:
  • Book 1: Last Light
  • Book 2: Night Light
  • Book 3: True Light
  • Book 4: Dawn's Light
  • Also by Terri Blackstock: If I Run, Cape Refuge, Intervention, Smoke Screen, Aftermath
  • Includes a note from the author and discussion questions for book clubs
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      • AudioFile Magazine
        It's now been eight months since the occurrence of the world power outage featured in Blackstock's Restoration series. People are learning to live off the land, help each other, and survive. However, hatred, violence, and all sorts of crime abound. The Banning family does not escape these horrors. But, in spite of them, romance, faith, and hope blossom. The third in the series comes to life as narrated by Susie Breck. Her performance leaves listeners enthralled with her ability to take every part in this fast-paced story. The combination of faith, drama, and good narration makes this a superb audiobook. N.L. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine
      • Publisher's Weekly

        June 18, 2007
        Blackstock's third novel in the Restoration series is slow-moving in the first half, but the pace picks up considerably in the second. The Branning family and their neighbors are now eight months into a worldwide blackout, trying to make ends meet and survive one crisis after another as violence rips their community apart. With the sheriff and his deputies desperately overworked and earning only a tiny fraction of their former pay, they can no longer keep their overcrowded, disease-ridden county jail under control. That means that it's up to Deni Branning to help clear the name of boy-next-door love interest Mark Green when he's wrongly accused of attempted murder. The novel reveals a heavy hand with religion, but Blackstock's overt sermonizing does offer some strong and wise thoughts on forgiveness: "Forgiveness was not an emotion," one character reflects. "You didn't have to feel it. You just had to do it."

      • Publisher's Weekly

        May 21, 2007
        Blackstock's third novel in the Restoration series is slow-moving in the first half, but the pace picks up considerably in the second. The Branning family and their neighbors are now eight months into a worldwide blackout, trying to make ends meet and survive one crisis after another as violence rips their community apart. With the sheriff and his deputies desperately overworked and earning only a tiny fraction of their former pay, they can no longer keep their overcrowded, disease-ridden county jail under control. That means that it's up to Deni Branning to help clear the name of boy-next-door love interest Mark Green when he's wrongly accused of attempted murder. The novel reveals a heavy hand with religion, but Blackstock's overt sermonizing does offer some strong and wise thoughts on forgiveness: "Forgiveness was not an emotion," one character reflects. "You didn't have to feel it. You just had to do it."

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    • English

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