Ice Fall By: Michael Edelson Cover Art: Ksenia Kozhevnikova ISBN 10: 1537680382 ISBN 13: 9781537680385 ISSN: ISFDB Publication Record # ASIN: B01M00G046 British National Bibliography System Number: Canadian National Catalogue (AMICUS) Number: Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication: National Library of Australia Bib ID: OCLC Number: 1130589445 (OCoLC): eISBN 10: eISBN 13: Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number: Publisher: CreateSpace (2016) Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction, It started with tremors, aftershocks of an event that no one was left to report on. Then the snow came, slow and steady, and it didn't stop. Day by day, inch by inch, everything disappeared beneath a crushing mass so deep that only the tops of the tallest trees remained. Saved by some fluke of elevation and wind patterns, Peter's cabin was spared while the rest of the world drowned beneath an ocean of solid water. Or so he thought. Driven to the brink of insanity by terrible isolation, he survives long enough to see the skies clear and the sun return. As the snow melts, it reveals an almost alien world, a barely recognizable landscape littered with the remnants of civilization. Together with a handful of survivors, Peter sets out to discover the cause of the event that broke humanity's hold on the world, and to learn whether it will strike again. After losing everything in a bitter divorce, Peter retreats to a secluded cabin in the Catskill Mountains, where he is trapped by earthquakes and months of unrelenting snow. Just as he is convinced he is the only survivor of a mysterious global cataclysm, he meets a woman seeking refuge from a past she won't reveal. Her arrival rescues him from unbearable isolation, but when the snow finally stops and her secret catches up with her, Peter is forced to choose between saving her life and following his conscience. His decision sends them running for their lives and searching for answers as the melting snow reveals a world unlike anything anyone has ever seen. Together they will learn not only what caused the greatest disaster in the planet's history, but that the worst may be yet to come. . It started with tremors- aftershocks of an event no one was left to report on. Then the snow came and didn't stop until only the tallest trees saw daylight. Saved by some fluke of elevation or wind patterns, Peter's cabin was spared while the rest of the world drowned beneath an ocean of solid water. Or so he thought. When the snow finally melted, it revealed a barely recognizable, almost alien landscape. Together with a handful of other survivors, Peter sets out to discover the cause of the event that had broken humanity's hold on the world, and to learn whether it could strike again