This is an ebook - I don't know why it says Paperback above. The author is a pen name of Laurie R. King. I love her Russell & Holmes books, have them all, and reread them often, so I thought I would give this one a try. She says it was the first one she wrote - or at least started - it wasn't finished until after the first R&H book was published. This is one I am just picking up now and then between other books, so it may take a while unless I get sucked in.
I was right - I was nearly halfway through before I was completely sucked in, then I couldn't put it down. I am not usually a fan of the post-apocalyptic genre, but this was quite a fascinating story! It was inspired by the myth of the warrior queen Califia. A village in California, where war has decimated society and a strange virus causes males to die, is managed and protected by women. Since males are rare, they are protected by the warrior women like Dian, who also trains dogs as protectors. Men are not allowed to fight or do anything that might be dangerous, because there are so few of them; they must be kept alive to continue the species. They must also be guarded against kidnapping by roving bands of women. A group of strangers appears at the village, asking to join them in the future, as their home has been made uninhabitable by radiation leaking into the water supply. They leave behind one of their men and his little son, who befriend Dian. Dian, as the chief protector of the village, makes a trip with two of her dogs to the strangers' home village, to try to decide if it is safe to let them come. When she is injured, she is rescued and befriended by a strange woman with a secret. Eventually Dian goes to Ashtown, supposedly the worst town in the Bay area. In order to free her friend, she joins the Guardians, the repressive and brutal 'police' of the town, and has to fight her own inclination to brutality. A most interesting read, and quite touching in places, even if you don't care for dystopian stories.