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The Last Cherry Orchard
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Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
- Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8231822560
- EAN9798231822560
- Date de parution03/10/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurWalzone Press
Résumé
In a world where the soil has turned against its keepers, seventeen-year-old Riku tends the last living cherry trees on Earth. They're all that remain of his grandfather's farm-and of the world that used to be. When a desperate stranger named Rafa appears at the edge of his land, their uneasy alliance sets them on a journey across the dying American West in search of a place where life might begin again.
Haunted by loss and bound by a fragile hope, Riku and Rafa face what's left of civilization-ruined cities, fractured governments, and the powerful Unity regime, determined to control whatever still grows. But between violence and silence, they find something unexpected: connection, resilience, and the quiet defiance of choosing care in a world built on control. Told with lyrical prose and cinematic intensity, The Last Cherry Orchard is a post-collapse love story about what survives when everything else fades-memory, trust, and the stubborn beauty of life itself.
For readers of Emily St. John Mandel, Neal Shusterman, and The Giver, this tender, hopeful novel asks one timeless question:When the world ends, what do you keep alive?
Haunted by loss and bound by a fragile hope, Riku and Rafa face what's left of civilization-ruined cities, fractured governments, and the powerful Unity regime, determined to control whatever still grows. But between violence and silence, they find something unexpected: connection, resilience, and the quiet defiance of choosing care in a world built on control. Told with lyrical prose and cinematic intensity, The Last Cherry Orchard is a post-collapse love story about what survives when everything else fades-memory, trust, and the stubborn beauty of life itself.
For readers of Emily St. John Mandel, Neal Shusterman, and The Giver, this tender, hopeful novel asks one timeless question:When the world ends, what do you keep alive?



