menu
{ "item_title" : "The Living Compact", "item_author" : [" Thomas Degan "], "item_description" : "Ten years into the accord that ended a war neither side fully won, Marrowyn and Elara have built something that looks, from the outside, like stability. The reform holds. The diplomatic framework holds. The practice of necromancy, consent-based and costly, holds the memory of the dead in careful trust.What is changing, quietly, is Marrowyn's reach.The channels to the newly dead are closing in order. She has known the full trajectory for three years. She has told no one. Until now.When a renegade theological framework begins spreading through the reformed theocracy's young clergy, the reform council convenes a formal inquiry at the border station at Veth. The framework is not entirely wrong. That is what makes it dangerous. It names a grief the reform dismantled without replacing, and the woman who wrote it has spent a decade sharpening her argument in exile, waiting for someone to finally hear it.The answer cannot come from governance or diplomatic language. It requires testimony from the founding dead themselves. And giving it will cost Marrowyn the last of what she has left to spend.The Living Compact is the concluding novel of The Bone Covenant Trilogy: a political fantasy about necromancy, institutional reform, and a thirty-year marriage facing the question it has never had to answer before. What does love look like when the emergency is finally over?Not a triumph. Not an elegy. Two women stepping back from the work they built, handing it to someone who will carry it differently, and finding that this is not loss.It is what they were building toward all along.", "item_img_path" : "https://covers4.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/9/79/825/188/9798251882995_b.jpg", "price_data" : { "retail_price" : "19.99", "online_price" : "19.99", "our_price" : "19.99", "club_price" : "19.99", "savings_pct" : "0", "savings_amt" : "0.00", "club_savings_pct" : "0", "club_savings_amt" : "0.00", "discount_pct" : "10", "store_price" : "" } }
The Living Compact|Thomas Degan

The Living Compact

local_shippingShip to Me
In Stock.
FREE Shipping for Club Members help

Overview

Ten years into the accord that ended a war neither side fully won, Marrowyn and Elara have built something that looks, from the outside, like stability. The reform holds. The diplomatic framework holds. The practice of necromancy, consent-based and costly, holds the memory of the dead in careful trust.

What is changing, quietly, is Marrowyn's reach.

The channels to the newly dead are closing in order. She has known the full trajectory for three years. She has told no one. Until now.

When a renegade theological framework begins spreading through the reformed theocracy's young clergy, the reform council convenes a formal inquiry at the border station at Veth. The framework is not entirely wrong. That is what makes it dangerous. It names a grief the reform dismantled without replacing, and the woman who wrote it has spent a decade sharpening her argument in exile, waiting for someone to finally hear it.

The answer cannot come from governance or diplomatic language. It requires testimony from the founding dead themselves. And giving it will cost Marrowyn the last of what she has left to spend.

The Living Compact is the concluding novel of The Bone Covenant Trilogy: a political fantasy about necromancy, institutional reform, and a thirty-year marriage facing the question it has never had to answer before. What does love look like when the emergency is finally over?

Not a triumph. Not an elegy. Two women stepping back from the work they built, handing it to someone who will carry it differently, and finding that this is not loss.

It is what they were building toward all along.

This item is Non-Returnable

Details

  • ISBN-13: 9798251882995
  • ISBN-10: 9798251882995
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publish Date: March 2026
  • Dimensions: 8 x 5 x 0.54 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.57 pounds
  • Page Count: 258

Related Categories

You May Also Like...

    1

BAM Customer Reviews