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Freedom Nations

Freedom Afrika

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In Freedom Afrika, Cosmo Starlight’s sequel to his debut novel Freedom Incorporated, Noodle Church escapes solitary confinement to live with people who stand against bombs, bullets, powders, and policemen. Journeying over three continents bringing only a pack which rarely comes off his back wearing canvas pants he’d become accustomed to sleeping in, Africans procure Noodle a home so he doesn’t have to sleep on streets for Christmas. They feed Noodle, lend him jackets to wear when it’s cold, and provide security ensured by honest, trustworthy relationships.

Noodle suspects wardens track his escape and finds wildland unfolding along a thousand kilometers of rugged coastline to document life in a system that keeps people working with cameras and clandestine surveillance. Where threats are feral bulls soaking in coastal sun Noodle thought he discovered freedom until an International Intelligence Service agent aids his recollection of love lost after being imprisoned in Freedom Incorporated’s super-maximum security-ward without charges, a trial, or record of detainment. When stuck in a place so remote footpaths replace roads, the provocateur gains Noodle’s trust only to compromise his strength for men riding dirt-bikes to push the boy born with blue skin beyond the bounds of Freedom’s rule.

Agents didn’t break Noodle. He doesn’t get caught killing anyone. Instead Noodle fled Camp lacking clean water to sleep shelter-less on African wildland journeying to the Town where he awoke Christmas morning on the floor of a snack shop. Agents track him there too yet, after fighting a twenty-year long war, Africans excel at security. People who witnessed brothers being shot, poisoned, and burned alive proclaimed, “Noodle it doesn’t matter if men wearing white suits come with masks attached to breathing apparatuses then allege you have a rare disease nobody’s ever heard of. Even if they say it’s a matter of national security we’ll never let the wardens take you again. Here people fight to defend independence.”

Africans were poor where Noodle lived but rejected bombs, bullets, powders, and policemen. Freedom Afrika taught people need food, water, shelter, and love to survive. That love is all Noodle needed!

605 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 11, 2014

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About the author

Cosmo Starlight

2 books1 follower
Cosmo Starlight is a humanist and a naturalist who began to write after conceiving Church, The Television Show. The original web series depicts Noodle Church leading up to the character’s incarceration and it’s still available free using any HTML reading device.

Starlight’s debut novel Freedom Incorporated contrasts freedom versus power. The author’s lens is dichotomy of positive and negative; in all, themes of Starlight’s work that lens is applied to include economics, political organization, metaphysics, and alternate history. This author’s subjects are governments, markets, community networks, the people and more.

Starlight’s sequel to Freedom Incorporated, also named freedom, Freedom Afrika is titled after that continent renowned for freedom and adventure plus their associated dangers. Freedom Afrika follows protagonist Noodle Church from his escape out of prison in “Freedom Incorporated” to independence.

Author Cosmo Starlight strongly believes societies united in opposition to weaponized conflict shine as beacons of freedom that lead Earth and he suggests forging mechanisms that preserve justice in advance of discord into the bedrock society is built on. Cosmo Starlight resides in remote terrain but pops up once per year to publish. When idle, he relates basic human values to cultures of people predating centuries of Western history. This author’s objective is to discover universal truth. He hopes that truth will unite the world as one.

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May 28, 2014
Author Cosmo Starlight's best book to date. It'll take you to opposite edges of abandonment and inclusion as back to back chapters. No one can touch the diverse quantity of international social issues. This book will get people talking about subjects they're not comfortable with.
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