Black Bead

Book One of the Black Bead Chronicles

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Pub Date Jan 11 2016 | Archive Date Apr 17 2017

Description


On a savage, outlying planet an enclave of psionically-trained humans have built a utopian, matriarchal society that lives in harmony with all life. Leaving behind the polluted and corrupt world in which they lived, they colonized a new home far from the eyes of the galactic empire. Shielded from the rest of the galaxy by the dangerous beasts that inhabit their lush, forested world, the village lives a simple life under their Home Dome.


Under the direction of the ruling coven, each child of the Windfall Dome is tested at a young age to assess their abilities – a test which can plot the course for the rest of their lives. Unfortunately, Cheobawn—the daughter of the ruling First Mother to the dome—is marked with the Black Bead on her Choosing Day, a symbol of bad luck and shame. It seems the child the mothers had placed so much hope in would not be the future ruler they had hoped for. Yet there is something powerful about her that the elders don’t understand. 


Finally of age, Cheobawn is chosen to join a pack to act as the psychic Ear on a foraging mission outside the dome. She knows this is her chance to prove herself. But something sinister stalks them and each member of the pack must draw on their unique strengths and a lifetime of training if they want to survive to see another day. 


In her visionary new series The Black Bead Chronicles, author J.D. Lakey invites you to journey along with Cheobawn, Megan, Tam, Connor, and Alain as they use their wits and their Luck to unravel the mysteries of the deceptively bucolic life beneath the dome in this coming of age metaphysical science fiction adventure.



On a savage, outlying planet an enclave of psionically-trained humans have built a utopian, matriarchal society that lives in harmony with all life. Leaving behind the polluted and corrupt...


Advance Praise

"Lakey's stories have magic, a complex mythology, and her dedication to avoiding milquetoast females." Kit-Bacon Gressitt, San Diego Uptown News

"The premise of Black Bead is wonderful, and it was a fun, short read I happily breezed through. It was refreshing to read new sci-fi with an original plot, on a new planet." Carly Courtney, Sci-Fi Addicts.com

"Lakey's stories have magic, a complex mythology, and her dedication to avoiding milquetoast females." Kit-Bacon Gressitt, San Diego Uptown News

"The premise of Black Bead is wonderful, and...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9780692609477
PRICE $9.99 (USD)

Average rating from 11 members


Featured Reviews

This story was interesting, but really fast. There is really no exposition in the story, so I had to go back and read the summary again. I would have liked some setup before reading and further explanation of how the covens were separated and what tribes there were. Also I spent a great deal of time wondering if time passed the same on their planet as it did ours. 6 and 10 years old seemed very young for the actions of these characters, so it helped me to imagine their age multiplied by two. I think this should have included a prologue to clear up details and appeal to more science fiction readers, but it's still a pleasant read.

Aside from those details, the story was good. It was written well and the characters were well-rounded. I did enjoy that this story was short because I'm looking for an adventure story to use next year for a novel study. I also enjoyed that a character with a clear disadvantage was still "picked first for the team," albeit because of someone who was close to her refusing to join, but it ended up giving the whole pack the skills needed. I also enjoyed the use of sign language and the power of teamwork.

I do look forward to presenting this as an option for a close reading for my high schoolers. The pacing was easy to keep up with and the scenery and adventure was beautifully aching.

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This book was reviewed for Wayward Press via Netgalley

Lakey’s Black Bead will snatch you up, racing headlong behind Cheobawn and her Pack on their harrowing First Foray. Cheobawn, and her protector Megan, are the newest members Tam’s recently forged pack. He wants Megan, as only females can be the Ear for a Pack, picking up the noise in the ambient to warn of dangers, and in creating elaborate mental maps. Megan will only agree if Cheobawn is allowed to as well. Unfortunately, Cheobawn is a Black Bead, considered chaotic and unlucky. Tests are given at age three, to determine what colour bead a person will wear, delineating the society into a random, arbitrary caste system based upon this criteria. Indeed, children who gain a Black Bead are usually shunned, and oft outright killed, in order to stave off their supposed bad luck.

Tam decides to accept Cheobawn into his Pack. She is the better Ear of the two girls. Their very first foray illustrates Cheobawn’s chaotic luck. She lead them to a wondrous place, a sheltered glade, just in time for the first flight of baby glasslizards (I want one). Rather than foraging, the group loiters in the glade, falling asleep and missing when they should have started back home. And thus did Cheobawn's luck change. The Pack begins a headlong flight back home, with their powerful Ear in lead. Will they make it back to safety in time? If they do, will the people Cheobawn wish to call friend turn against her too?

The themes of synchronicity, and interconnectedness, run a vivid vein of silver through the story. The glasslizard incident triggered, in a manner, all of the following incidents after it, both good and bad. I follow a spiritual path that involves rune work, and see these energies inherent in all things. I also see people as being primarily tied to one rune collective above all others. Cheobawn is a perthroi. She is very tuned to the Perthro, or probability, inherent in all things. She followed this to get home, tweaking the probabilities when she could. This made me very excited. I haven't found many Perthro oriented characters in books.

I think Cheobawn's people need to recognise the value of Chaos. I think most people in reality do as well. Cheobawn would be blessed of Loki. Chaos beckons necessary change, and all destruction leads to new growth. It's also completely impartial. The nature of Bear Under the Mountain supports this within the story. There are great lessons here about cooperation, and the valuable insights that could be lost if you discount one person (or class of people) because of arbitrary class distinctions.

📚📚📚📚📚 Highly recommended

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Although this is written for teenagers and not a teenager myself this was a thoroughly entertaining story.
Enjoyable for teenagers and adults.

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Black bead was a very strange book for me. I honestly DNF at about 65% which I know... I should have just kept going. I was just rather confused through it all and I felt as if I was thrown into a story that has already been told knowing nothing of the beginning. I do plan on trying to finish this book.

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