Author's e-books - Society. Page - 1
It's the year 2032 and Mercy lives the perfect life as a Superior being in the distopian civilization that is The Society. Cut off from the rest of the world, she knows nothing but where she lives and rumors about the Fringe; a savage civilization just outside the wall that keeps all citizens of The Society inside and anything else out.
A few days back while pondering about the Law of individuality and how individuality is so much a part of creation and nature that without it not only would things cease to work as a unity but they would all disintegrate, pulling far away from each other and cease to exist. When we look around us carefully we begin to see that there exists a personal signature to all this so much so that nature and the whole of creation thrives long the scared lines of individualization. No two things of the
For as long as she can remember she has wanted to marry the Duke of Kensington and her father unknowingly just made it happen. Her father having worked to earn his newly acquired title wants his daughters to be married to men with status so that they can be true ladies of society. However the Duke didn't know that his bride-to-be wasn't a lady and she intends to keep it that way...
It's the year 2032 and Mercy lives the perfect life as a Superior being in the distopian civilization that is The Society. Cut off from the rest of the world, she knows nothing but where she lives and rumors about the Fringe; a savage civilization just outside the wall that keeps all citizens of The Society inside and anything else out.
A few days back while pondering about the Law of individuality and how individuality is so much a part of creation and nature that without it not only would things cease to work as a unity but they would all disintegrate, pulling far away from each other and cease to exist. When we look around us carefully we begin to see that there exists a personal signature to all this so much so that nature and the whole of creation thrives long the scared lines of individualization. No two things of the
For as long as she can remember she has wanted to marry the Duke of Kensington and her father unknowingly just made it happen. Her father having worked to earn his newly acquired title wants his daughters to be married to men with status so that they can be true ladies of society. However the Duke didn't know that his bride-to-be wasn't a lady and she intends to keep it that way...