About
Fifty years after the seas rose, humanity didn't just survive, it adapted.
The Estuary Collective has built something beautiful: floating villages sustained by kelp forests and tidal power, where community means everything and the horizon stretches endless and full of possibility. They've learned to live with the water, not against it.
Then the sickness comes. And their healers have no cure.
Somewhere in the drowned city of Old Bristol, where only the tallest towers break the surface and bridges span between skyscrapers at dizzying heights, there may be people who kept the old medical knowledge alive. But reaching them means sailing into the unknown, trusting strangers, and discovering that the world is far larger, and far more connected, than anyone imagined.
Tides of Tomorrow is hopeful climate fiction for readers who loved Station Eleven, Becky Chambers, and City of Ember. A solarpunk saga of community, adaptation, and the radical act of choosing connection over fear.