Shaara is running out of friends.

The sacrifices she and Warden made two years ago bought the League time, not victory. The war against the Undying has left them exhausted, drained of everything but hope—and precious little of that. The simple fact is that the Undying are going to win. Warden knows it, Shaara knows it. The Undying sure as hell know it.

Until, out of the black, the Eternal comes to Shaara with an offer she can’t refuse, however much she’d like to. The threat he warned her about two years ago is real, and now it’s come calling. It cares nothing for their little war. All life in the galaxy, Undying or not, will end if it spreads unchecked. Shaara and the Eternal have little choice but to work together to destroy it . . . At least, for now.

But people on both sides aren’t happy with an alliance, however temporary. Some of them are willing to risk all that lives just for a shot at power—and revenge. If Shaara can’t find a way to defeat them, she and the few friends she has left will lose more than their lives.

They’ll lose everything.


Praise for Oblivion’s Triumph

“I've read a lot of space operas over the years but seldom one this long and so exciting with fully developed characters. In the first two novels in the trilogy, a galactic environment is created with alien characters that engage the reader in ways that make one forget they aren't human. Over two novels, the plot evolved into a catastrophic war between a race of immortal super-aliens who are almost impossible to kill, fighting and beating a league of systems led by a human, Shaara and Warden, her super-AI controlled ship. Oblivion's Triumph introduces a contagion that kills everything and everyone, including the immortals, referred to as the "Undying." The question is: how can a war-weary league of systems overcome the contagion which will kill them and still fight the Undying who will enslave them? The reader will have to read the book to find out if they can but I guarantee, long as it is, this novel will keep the reader turning pages until the end. The first two novels in the trilogy might be read out of order without too much confusion but it's not advised. Oblivion's Triumph can't be read out of order and understand what went before. This trilogy is one of the best that I've read since I started reading science fiction in the days of Asimov and McFadyen is a talented new author that should be followed. His writing draws the reader in and won't let him/her loose until the story ends.”

— Blokeman, Amazon

“I admit that I took my time, chapter after chapter, to enjoy the last volume of the extraordinary extraterrestrial adventures of the main character of Shaara, quite unique.

This volume 3 is like the first two: entertaining, surprising, with a lot of mystery, unexpected events, action against the backdrop of an exotic science fiction story!

I personally loved the main character of Shaara!

It is now with sadness and nostalgia that I close this fascinating novel on an end that I certainly would not have guessed.

Congratulations and thank you to the author for this incredible adventure!”

— Sentinelle23, Goodreads


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Oblivion's Blade