: Lilia Cadette
: The Island of Golden Zandolie 4. The Blue Blood
: Strelbytskyy Multimedia Publishing
: 9780880030106
: 1
: CHF 1,70
:
: Erzählende Literatur
: English
: 336
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
After incredible adventures in the Caribbean with aliens, mutants and reptilians, our heroes return home - to Paris, London, the various cities of Russia. But the call of the 'blue blood' brings them back together again. Who is the real alien? This is the fourth book of 'The Island of Golden Zandolie' series.  All illustrations done by the author. 

She was born on August 13, 1967 in Odessa, Ukraine. Higher technical education. She worked for a long time in the Black Sea Shipping Company, then she married a foreigner and went to live in the Caribbean, where I still live happily. Now I'm not working on a diploma, so I decided to do what I love - writing novels. 

Chapter 2


Jolly Roger vs. Big Eyes’ Dragon


A distant, mountainous island lost in the Atlantic has become a second home for a former Dutch baker named Roger… and a real pirate den.

This place was nicknamed the Island of Golden Zandolie among various adventurers, rogues, smugglers and other random rabble. And this place was the last in the Caribbean, where real Indians still lived from time immemorial.

Some years ago, the long string of tragic events started with a sudden appearance on the island and then death of the alien Golden Zandolie and his brethren.

Then, for a very short time, the Island was ruled by his children, giant and sterile mutants, who scared away the entire local (human) population – everyone except the Indians and pirates.

And now on the Island there has come a time of anarchy, without any government, electricity, transport or communications. At one end of the islet was Jolly Roger Cove – home to the modern pirates of the Caribbean, and at the other end was an Indian reservation led by its chief, Dominic.

People, who left the island in horror and haste, did not even want to remember their past life in this deceptive tropical paradise.

It seemed as if the whole world had forgotten about the very existence of an entire state, albeit a small one. No one was in a hurry to help, although the territory of the Island of Golden Zandolie could now easily be called a zone of humanitarian crisis.

It played into the hands of Roger and his pirate friends. A tropical island with many secret bays and outlawed was an excellent transshipment point for all “gifts of the sea”.

What about the Indians? What was it like for them, who grew up on many modern benefits of civilization (light, communications, the Internet), to be completely cut off from the outside world?

Even before that, the Indians were avoiding any contacts with the rest of