Gardener of The World: A Family, a Village & a Solar Storm
By (Author) Gerald R Grady
BookBaby
BookBaby
4th November 2025
United States
Paperback
348
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
Sean O'Brien is a retired engineer living off-grid with his family, near a small farm village in Michigan. Sean and his friend Tom, both amateur radio operators, know just enough about solar weather to recognize the profound scale and gravity of a power outage occurring one clear day in March. A solar, coronal mass ejection (CME) has stripped all modern conveniences from a modern society. It has forced everyone affected, to reflect on their life experiences and skills, and question the unthinkable. Fortified by the eternal wisdom of his wife Kate and the sagacious enthusiasm of daughter-in-law Ling, Sean feels justified in approaching the residents of South Branch with his knowledge, hoping to convince them that this particular power outage will be a very prolonged, survival challenge. Sean is reassured by the initial response from the village residents, and his family is drawn into the community's rapidly expanding survival effort, while reaction to the outage goes poorly elsewhere. Violence threatens the village twice but is dealt with by the creative tactics of prepared residents with the guidance of a local combat veteran. Good-natured bonds begin to develop between the family and village residents as they set forth to use their traditions, wits, and resourcefulness to attempt to endure as much as a year without electricity or any outside assistance.
The author is a decorated war veteran and retired aerospace engineer who specialized in investigating critical aircraft component problems/failures. He has had a passion for nature and science all his life, with much of his childhood spent researching and collecting anything that turned his head. As a licensed amateur radio operator, he became familiar with the effects of solar weather on radio propagation. This led him to realize the variety of ways a worst case, widespread, coronal mass ejection (CME) could affect modern society and its individuals-for better or worse.