Prime Day

Como cliente Amazon Prime obtén 3 meses de Audible gratis

Diseño de la portada del título The Sinkhole

The Sinkhole

A Port Townsend climate fiction novel

Muestra

Escúchalo ahora gratis con tu suscripción a Audible

Prueba gratis durante 30 días
Después de los 30 días, 9,99 €/mes. Cancela tu siguiente plan mensual cuando quieras.
Disfruta de forma ilimitada de este título y de una colección con 90.000 más.
Escucha cuando y donde quieras, incluso sin conexión.
Sin compromiso. Cancela tu siguiente plan mensual cuando quieras.

The Sinkhole

De: Ricardo Gomez
Narrado por: Megan O'Neill
Prueba gratis durante 30 días

Después de los 30 días, 9,99 €/mes. Cancela cuando quieras.

Compra ahora por 16,21 €

Compra ahora por 16,21 €

Oferta de tiempo limitado | 0,99 € al mes durante los primeros 3 meses

Obtén este título con una suscripción a Audible Premium: 0,99 € al mes durante los primeros 3 meses

The Sinkhole

The earthquake lasted four minutes. The sinkhole swallowed downtown Port Townsend in seconds. For the 1,600 survivors, the real disaster is just beginning.

March 2027. A magnitude 9.
0 earthquake triggers a catastrophic sinkhole that consumes the heart of Port Townsend, Washington. Isabel Reyes, a marine biologist leading a school field trip, throws six children across a widening crack seconds before it becomes a chasm. They survive. The Marine Science Center, and everyone inside, does not.

Now Isabel is responsible for six orphaned children in a refugee camp with no running water, no medical supplies, and no government response. Eight-year-old Daniel hasn't spoken since watching his best friend die. Reed Hawthorne is documenting the dead instead of climate data. His daughter Mary is learning to record testimony because someone has to bear witness. And the community elders are teaching them all that the only help coming is the help they build themselves.

What emerges in the Chimacum Valley is an experiment in democratic survival, and an accounting of what it costs. Sociocracy circles for decision-making under catastrophe. Consensus processes that function but require people to break. Workshop protocols spreading skills while bodies fail from starvation rations. A radio network broadcasting to forty communities that shrinks to fifteen as the peninsula collapses.

Over one brutal year: forty people die from preventable causes. Four hundred eighty-six refugees are turned away at gunpoint through fair democratic process. When Daniel finally speaks again, testifying about the costs of survival, he goes silent for good. When their leaders implement consent-based governance successfully, they shatter from the moral weight of fatal outcomes fairly reached.

And then, six days after their first anniversary, an armed community called Shelton arrives with three thousand people and takes control anyway.

©2026 Ricardo Gomez (P)2026 Ricardo Gomez
Ciencia ficción Postapocalíptica
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No hay reseñas aún