Seventeen-year-old Ruby Voss has spent two years pretending that grief is the same as numbness and that numbness is the same as safety. She reads the government bulletins every morning, flags the places where language is doing the work of erasure, and tells herself that noticing what the Citadel is hiding is just a habit she picked up from her mother. Something she inherited, like her handwriting. Like the way she holds a pencil.

She is very good at pretending.

Her mother, Elaine Voss, was resolved two years ago. That is the Citadel's word. Resolved. Ruby has spent two years refusing to let that word be the last one.

The Citadel is a city that runs on erasure. Its registry documents every resident, tracks every movement, and harvests the recorded existence of anyone it deems inconvenient, feeding those erased names and histories into a processing system called the Accumulation that powers the very infrastructure used to erase the next person. It is a closed loop. It is self-sustaining. And it has been running, uninterrupted, for as long as anyone still living can remember.

Then Ruby finds a note left under a wire at an illegal market in the buffer zone between sectors. Then she finds the Unnamed Quarter, a neighborhood that does not appear on any official map, full of people who have survived by refusing to be counted by a system that does not count them fairly. Then she meets Cael, unregistered, self-named, careful with his hands and careless with his heart in ways she takes months to fully understand, who has been making maps of everything the city's cartography deliberately leaves blank.

And then she finds her mother's letter, hidden in a coffee cup in an allocation storage facility, addressed not to nobody but to Ruby specifically, with precise and devastating intelligence about what the Accumulation actually is, what it actually runs on, and where its vulnerability lives.

Ruby has seventeen days before the next harvest cycle. She has eight notebooks of documented evidence. She has a network of people building a record in a neighborhood the city insists does not exist. She has Cael, who looks at her like she is something the Citadel has been trying to erase for years and has not quite managed. And she has her mother's final lesson: that the gap between what language says and what language does is one of the most important gaps there is.

She has been reading that gap her whole life.

It is time to do something with what she has read.

The Ash and the Unnamed is a YA dystopian romantasy about the politics of naming and erasure, about building records that outlast the systems that oppose them, and about the slow, certain, terrifying process of allowing someone to see you accurately in a world that survives on making people invisible.

Perfect for readers who love:

  • Protagonists who fight with intelligence and documentation rather than weapons
  • Slow-burn romance built on mutual recognition and earned trust
  • Dystopian worldbuilding revealed through language and bureaucratic detail rather than action set pieces
  • Stories about what it means to be erased and what it means to insist on existing anyway
  • Found communities built from necessity and transformed into something like home
  • Archives, maps, notebooks, and the radical act of writing things down
  • YA that trusts its readers with moral complexity and ambiguity
  • Romances where the emotional stakes feel as high as the external ones
  • Quiet, precise protagonists who observe more than they speak and feel everything they do not say



Autorentext

Sophia Hartford is a contemporary romance author who writes about ambitious professionals finding love in the most unexpected places. Her debut novel, MEASURED RISK, centers on the beautiful collision between career ambition and matters of the heart?exploring what happens when two driven people refuse to choose between success and love.

Sophia is fascinated by stories of transformation. She believes that the best love stories are the ones that challenge us to be braver, stronger, and more authentic versions of ourselves. Through her writing, she explores the complexity of modern relationships, the power of vulnerability, and the courage it takes to build something meaningful with another person.

When she's not writing, Sophia can be found:

✓ Exploring NYC neighborhoods for inspiration ✓ Enjoying vanilla lattes and good conversation ✓ Reading everything from literary fiction to romance ✓ Researching architecture and urban development ✓ Dreaming up the next meet-cute

MEASURED RISK is her debut novel and the first in what she hopes will be a long career of writing stories that celebrate ambition, romance, and the beautiful risks we take for love.

She is currently working on her next contemporary romance novel and would love to connect with readers.

Titel
The Ash and the Unnamed
Untertitel
Young Adult Fiction, #1
EAN
9798235574311
Format
E-Book (epub)
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
0.1 MB