- Retail Price: 14.99
- Release Date: August 2012
- Page Count: 352
- Size: 5 1/2 x 8 1/2
- Binding: Trade
- ISBN: 978-0-7369-4912-5
- Case Lot Quantity: 40
Digital Winter
Prophecy expert Mark Hitchcock and award-winning novelist Alton Gansky provide a suspenseful and fast-moving story of life after a massive cyber attack.
Twenty-two-year-old savant Donny Elton can’t tie his shoes, but his computer skills are unsurpassed. Egged on by a shadowy figure only he can see and hear, Donny creates an evolving computer virus that knocks out satellites, power grids, and communication systems. The world is thrown back into a lifestyle it hasn’t known for a hundred years. Surgeons find themselves operating without electricity. The military can’t use its computers…
This gripping story of darkness and heroism highlights prophetic themes and the very real danger of a cyber attack.
Editorial Reviews
“This is a supernatural/techno/military/government thriller that succeeds on many levels. It is an exploration of possible events that might lead up to the end times. The story is a tension filled relationship between today’s headlines and prophetic material from the Bible, and the result is both realistically frightening and thought provoking.”
—CBA Retailers+Resources
“Digital Winter takes you on a whirlwind ride as this whole scenario plays out for you right in front of your eyes. The authors do an excellent job of placing in your mind the horrors of the events that actually could take place if something like this were to happen. I found myself eerily thinking that this was too realistic while at the same time saying, ‘This would make a great movie!’”
—TheChristianManifesto.com
"…an entertaining thriller. The action and thrills are non-stop. Hitchcock and Gansky make an excellent team.”
—ReviewsFavorite.com
“…couldn’t put this book down until the very end...”
—ReflectionsWithCoffee.com
“…I found this book to be interesting as well as different.”
—BookBazinga.blogspot.com
“This story hooked me fast…truly a great story by the authors.”
—CoffeyReader.blogspot.com


