Darkness and Dawn Series by George Allan England

3.20 · 5 ratings
  • The Vacant World (Darkness and Dawn #1)
    #1

    The Vacant World (Darkness and Dawn #1)

    George Allan England

    Rated: 3.00 of 5 stars
    · 1 ratings · published 1914

    The Pioneering Novel of New York After the Fall - New York City - the end of the 3rd millennium. Monumental buildings in ruins. Central Park a jungle peopled by savage sub-humans. A huge black shape moving across the night sky occluding the stars. Civilization has vanished along with humankind.Into this hostile new world two survivors of our enlightened age awaken from 1000 years of slumber - to fall victims to a world gone wild? - or to give mankind a second chance?

  • Beyond the Great Oblivion (Darkness and Dawn #2)
    #2

    Beyond the Great Oblivion (Darkness and Dawn #2)

    George Allan England

    Rated: 4.00 of 5 stars
    · 1 ratings · published 1914

    1000 Years After Our World Died - A Man and a Woman With the Future of Humanity in Their Hands - The distant future - New York is a jungle in more ways than one. Exotic flora and fauna thrive - savage tribes of cannibalistic sub-humans fight for dominance. It's a place of little hope The last vestiges of humanity set out across America's devastated landscape in search of their dream... more

  • The Afterglow (Darkness and Dawn #3)
    #3

    The Afterglow (Darkness and Dawn #3)

    George Allan England

    Rated: 3.00 of 5 stars
    · 1 ratings · published 1914

    Darkness & Dawn - Volume 3 - The AfterglowThe Classic Novel of a new AmericaSomewhere near the Great Lakes, 1000 years from now. 500 miles below our planet's surface tribes of near human albino warriors eke out an existence in a hostile environment... more

  • Darkness and Dawn (Darkness and Dawn #1-3)
    #1-3

    Darkness and Dawn (Darkness and Dawn #1-3)

    George Allan England

    Rated: 3.00 of 5 stars
    · 2 ratings · published 1914

    The islands in the harbor, too, were thickly overgrown. On Ellis, no sign of the immigrant station remained. Castle William was quite gone. And with a gasp of dismay and pain, Beatrice pointed out the fact that no longer Liberty held her bronze torch aloft. Save for a black, misshapen mass protruding through the tree-tops, the huge gift of France was no more.

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