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Agenda 21: Into the Shadows Hardcover – January 6, 2015

4.6 out of 5 stars 1,429 ratings

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The sequel to Agenda 21—which Brad Thor called “a brilliantly written, exhilarating, pulse-pounding adventure”—from #1 New York Times bestselling author and nationally syndicated radio host Glenn Beck.

It was once named America, but now it is just “the Republic.” Following the worldwide implementation of a UN-led program called Agenda 21, the once-proud people of America have become obedient residents who live in barren, brutal Compounds and serve the autocratic, merciless Authorities.

Citizens mainly keep their heads down and their mouths shut—but Emmeline is different. When the Authorities took her mother away, she started questioning the world around her. What happened to her mom? Why is everyone confined to grim living spaces and made to eat the same food cubes every day? Why was her own baby taken from her to be raised in the Children’s Village? And are those who got away during the Relocations—the so-called shadow people—merely a rumor?

When Emmeline’s questions lead to the realization that she will never see her child again, she decides to escape the Compound. Fleeing the armed enforcers of the Earth Protection Agency, and facing the unknown for the first time in their lives, Emmeline and her partner David run into the shadows in the desperate hope of finding something they’d only heard stories about from those who’d lived before the Relocations: freedom.
"All the Little Raindrops: A Novel" by Mia Sheridan for $10.39
The chilling story of the abduction of two teenagers, their escape, and the dark secrets that, years later, bring them back to the scene of the crime. | Learn more

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Glenn Beck, the nationally syndicated radio host and founder of TheBlaze television network, has written thirteen #1 bestselling books and is one of the few authors in history to have had #1 national bestsellers in the fiction, nonfiction, self-help, and children’s picture book genres. His recent fiction works include the thrillers Agenda 21, The Overton Window, and its sequel, The Eye of Moloch; his many nonfiction titles include Conform, Miracles and Massacres, Control, and Being George Washington. For more information about Glenn Beck, his books, and TheBlaze television network, visit GlennBeck.com and TheBlaze.com.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Agenda 21: Into the Shadows

CHAPTER ONE

EMMELINE

Day 1


We didn’t look back. We moved quickly toward the sound of running water somewhere ahead of us. Behind us we heard shouts and gunshots; flames licked the black night sky. The damp, slippery ground was uneven under our feet.

Elsa began to cry, a piercing sound that cut through the silence of the forest. My heart raced. Would the Enforcers or the Gatekeepers hear her?

David stopped and handed Elsa to me. She curled into my arm and I let her suck on my finger. David took the boy’s hand—it looked so small and fragile. The boy, clutching his bundle of clothing tightly, worked hard to keep up with David.

The unfamiliar sounds of the woods were ominous: rustlings in the grass, branches creaking, and our own rapid breathing—raspy and harsh. I heard the strange hooting of a bird. What kind of bird makes that noise? No time for questions. We had to travel as far and as fast as we could.

Back in the Compound someone rang the bell that signaled a half hour till dawn. Fools! The place was on fire and still they rang bells. Soon the Citizens would stand together and say the pledge: I pledge
allegiance to the Earth and to the animals of the Earth . . . making the circle sign on their foreheads, their thumb and forefinger touching.

Dawn was our enemy. It would steal our blanket of darkness. But I soon realized that sunrise doesn’t come to the woods like it does in the Compounds. It creeps in, wrapped in soft gray. The leafy branches overhead kept us shaded from the early light. We took advantage and kept scurrying downhill, slipping on the damp leaves, tripping over roots and rocks.

David and the boy were a few steps ahead of me. David looked back at me, then pointed ahead. I saw the silvery reflection of a wide stream through the trees. We walked faster. David began to run, pulling the boy by the arm as he went.

David tripped and fell, his full weight smashing against a rock, our bundle of supplies rolling ahead of him. Clutching Elsa, I ran to him. Blood seeped through the sleeve of his uniform. He groaned, sat up slowly, and cradled his right arm with his left. The boy ran ahead and retrieved our bundle. I knelt beside David and brushed some dirt from his face.

“I’m okay,” he whispered. But I could tell from his voice and the look on his face that he was in pain. He struggled to stand up, and then gingerly tested his right arm.

“It’s not broken,” he said. “Let’s keep moving.”

He started walking and we followed, each of us more careful with our steps, until we finally reached the bank above the water. I had never seen water like that before. I had only seen it in our ration bottles—confined, measured, limited. This water danced and twirled over the stones, rippling, turning, moving with purpose. Mother had told me about lakes and rivers; I had even seen her map that revealed vast blue oceans. But this was the first time I had seen so much water with my own eyes. Overwhelmed, I stood and stared, realizing all at once that I wasn’t prepared for what the real world looked like. I wasn’t prepared for how big it was.

David slid down the bank and stepped into the stream, moving from stone to stone along the edge, then into deeper water, pushing forward to the other side. The boy rushed to catch up with him. With every step, David looked back at me, beckoning me forward. He dipped his injured arm into the water, letting it flow over his sleeve, washing away some of the blood. Halfway across, the water was up to his knees. The boy held onto David’s uniform with one hand and, with the other, held our bundle high over his head. He was wet to his waist.

Could I follow? What if I fell and dropped Elsa? The boy looked back at me and motioned with his head, urging me to come. David stopped and called my name. “Emmeline.” His voice was pleading; he risked being heard. They had faith in me; they needed me. I slid down the hill, sitting, and the wetness of the earth seeped through my clothes. At the bottom, I stepped into the stream and gasped at how cold it was. But I didn’t stop. Step by step, clutching Elsa tightly, I walked forward. The current pushed against my feet, my legs. I was so focused on not falling or dropping Elsa that my temples throbbed and I could feel my pulse in my ears like a drumbeat.

David and the boy waited for me on the other side and together we scrambled up the steep bank, grabbing at whatever strong plants or branches we could use to pull ourselves up with using our free hands.

Finally, we were all together at the edge of the forest. We looked below at the stream that separated us from the Compound, then turned and walked into the dimness, surrounded by the tallest trees I had ever seen. Most were straight with thick brown trunks and leafy branches reaching up. But one had green needles instead of leaves and the branches sloped down so low that they brushed the ground. David pushed the branches aside and motioned for us to crawl into the space underneath them. It smelled sweet and clean in that small, cramped space. I took a deep breath, filling my lungs with the fragrance. A few ferns grew in the dark soil, graceful in the dimpled light. I had seen
ferns growing along the bicycle path in the Compound but I’d never seen a tree like this.

“We’ll rest here,” David whispered. “When it’s dark, we’ll move on.” He nodded his head toward the boy. “Who is he? Why did you bring him along?”

I glanced at the boy, worried about how he’d react to David, but his face was flat, expressionless. “I’ll explain later,” I said. “Let me see your arm.”

He rolled up his wet sleeve. The skin was ripped from his elbow to his wrist in a long, shallow gash with uneven edges. Dark red blood, thick and sticky, oozed from it. “It looks deeper than it is,” I told him. “We just need to keep pressure on it. You’ll be okay.”

He quickly rolled his sleeve back down, twisting it so it was tight against his arm. “It’s time to sleep.”

The ground under the tree was covered with fallen needles but it was surprisingly soft. The sun had fully risen; warmth was wrapping around us, soft and moist.

In spite of his wet clothes, the boy curled up, using a roll of diapers as a pillow, and was asleep almost instantly. David sat propped against the tree trunk. I leaned against him, my head on his chest. I could hear his heartbeat, strong and steady. Elsa, pink and warm, was safe in my arms.

“The boy,” I whispered, “was awake one night at the Village. He was near tears. Said his belly hurt. Seems that he wanted to use the washing-up area but couldn’t. Said it was against the rules.”

“The rules? For the washing-up area?”

“Yes. The children could only go when the Caretakers said they could. No other time.”

“That’s ridiculous.” David whispered.

“Right. So I gave him permission to break a rule. I let him go. After that, he told me he always wanted me to be with him. He said I was important because I could break the rules. I told him he was important
because I broke the rule for him. He trusted me. I couldn’t break his trust. I had to bring him.”

“I understand.” But David didn’t look like he understood. He sounded worried because we were now responsible for two children. Little did David know that I wished I could have saved more of them from their cold world. All of them.

We didn’t talk anymore. We needed to sleep.

I put my free hand into our bundle and tried to guess how many diapers and bottles we had. I knew there weren’t enough of either to last for very many days.

We spent our first day of freedom huddled under that tree, listening for the sound of footsteps in the forest and waiting for darkness so we could move on. But move on to where? Was any place safe?

I thought back to the old photograph that Mother had kept hidden in her mat. I treasured that picture of her holding me, both of us smiling into the camera. Behind us in that photo was a sturdy home, a loving place. A safe place. Every fiber in me longed to return to that home, to a new beginning free from punishment and rules and Gatekeepers and Enforcers.

I had the first pangs of hunger, but worse, I felt the sharp chill of fear. What if we couldn’t find a safe place to call home? Would we die out here alone in this forest?

I laid my head close against David’s chest to better hear and feel his strong, steady heartbeat.

Finally, I fell asleep.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 1476746826
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Threshold Editions; 1st edition (January 6, 2015)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9781476746821
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1476746821
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.1 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.1 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 1,429 ratings

About the author

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Glenn Beck
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Glenn Beck, a nationally syndicated radio host and founder of TheBlaze, is the author of thirteen #1 bestselling books. Beck is also the publisher of Mercury Ink, a publishing imprint (www.mercuryink.com) that, in conjunction with Simon & Schuster, released the #1 bestselling young adult series Michael Vey.

Glenn can be found on the web at www.glennbeck.com and www.theblaze.com.

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
1,429 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this book to be a great read with a fascinating story that adds more adventure compared to the first book. Moreover, the book is thought-provoking, showing insights into our future, and customers describe it as fast-paced with well-developed characters. However, the scariness level receives mixed reactions, with some finding it frightening while others consider it a letdown from the first book. The emotional content is also mixed, with customers describing it as emotionally charged.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

223 customers mention "Readability"217 positive6 negative

Customers find the book highly readable and enjoyable, particularly praising Glen Beck's works, with one customer noting it's worth reading for the story alone.

"...It isn't a sci-fi far out there thriller but more of a thoughtful read...." Read more

"...The price was good and so was the book. I wish there was another one as it's open ended & I'd love for the story to continue." Read more

"...Thought-provoking story that is very readable." Read more

"...Otherwise, I enjoyed the book." Read more

174 customers mention "Story quality"167 positive7 negative

Customers enjoy the story of this book, finding it fascinating and more adventurous than the first book in the series.

"...a cliff hanger as after the first Agenda 21 thankfully. The plot is steady, the characters from the first book are developed a bit more..." Read more

"...I wish there was another one as it's open ended & I'd love for the story to continue." Read more

"...if you don't want to believe in "conspiracy theories", this is a great story...." Read more

"...I liked it because it made me look at current events and people in the news in a different and thought provoking way...." Read more

38 customers mention "Thought provoking"35 positive3 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking and informative, providing insights into our future.

"...at current events and people in the news in a different and thought provoking way...." Read more

"...Excellent insights by Beck--as usual. His expertise in History shows in bold letters the direction we are headed...." Read more

"I truly enjoyed these 2 books. Informative along with a fiction story that was well written...." Read more

"...A quick and thought provoking read. Make sure you read "agenda 21" first or "Into the Shadows" will make little sense...." Read more

22 customers mention "Pacing"17 positive5 negative

Customers appreciate the pacing of the book, finding it fast-paced and easy to read, with one customer noting it picks up where the first book left off.

"...I’d recommend this to readers who want a good fast read; to those who read deeply and think about our worlds future; and to those who find peace in..." Read more

"...It was a pleasant surprise that there was no jump in time from where the last book ended and this one began, I hate it when they do that. I am..." Read more

"...I really liked the first book, but I loved this one. It moved faster and the characters were more developed...." Read more

"...this series, but maybe it should be under horror because it seems all too real!" Read more

19 customers mention "Character development"17 positive2 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book, noting that the characters are well developed and additional characters are added throughout the story.

"...book are developed a bit more throughout this one, and the new characters are interesting and immediately likeable or deplorable..." Read more

"...IS there a third one?! I hope so to either. I’m so in love with the characters and the storyline is captivating...." Read more

"...It moved faster and the characters were more developed. People need to read both books and investigate the sources at the end of both books...." Read more

"...There's a bit more references to G-d and there are new characters introduced that help David and Emmie and the kids on their journey...." Read more

7 customers mention "Emotional content"4 positive3 negative

Customers have mixed reactions to the emotional content of the book, with some finding it emotionally charged, while one customer describes it as depressing.

"...It is heart wrenching and just as fascinating as the previous book. If you liked the first one you will like the sequel...." Read more

"...satisfactory for the majority.....in fact it is stark, desolate and despairing...." Read more

"...It puts a face to the issues and attaches emotions to an agenda that many may have difficulty understanding the full effect and extent of the..." Read more

"The first one was so depressing I couldn't stand to listen to all of this one......" Read more

26 customers mention "Scariness level"4 positive22 negative

Customers find the book frightening, describing it as a scary look into the future, though some note that the ending is abrupt and the story is a let down from the first book in the series.

"This book is truly frightening!..." Read more

"Scary as hell. Unfortunately I realize that this is intended to be our future if we don’t stand up for what is right now...." Read more

"Scary outlook. Everyone should read this no matter what your political views are...." Read more

"Very scary book. We hope that never happens, but it is scary to know that Agenda 21 actually exists, as promulgated by the UN...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2016
    This was a wonderful sequel to Agenda 21, and I am hoping there will be a third releasing soon to complete the story. After reading the first book, I already had planned in my head how I foresaw the future and what I would want to happen next. I was mostly happy with how this book followed along with what I thought would happen, but there were enough twists and differences in my prediction and how it was written to add some excitement and twists to it. There really must be a third book though, as I don't feel this one leaves us completely satisfied. Not as much of a cliff hanger as after the first Agenda 21 thankfully.
    The plot is steady, the characters from the first book are developed a bit more throughout this one, and the new characters are interesting and immediately likeable or deplorable (as the situation warrants). This isn't a book full of happy endings, but it is made to be that way. I like the
    projection of what COULD happen in an extreme case if our world continues on it's current path. As already set in motion by real world events. Is it a bit extreme in the prediction, yes. Is it impossible for this to happen, not at all.
    If you like thrillers that could be based IRL, then you will like this book. It isn't a sci-fi far out there thriller but more of a thoughtful read. I've already passed both Agenda 21's to a friend and my father and their opinions mirror mine. We all liked them!
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2024
    I picked up the 1st book in this series at a thrift store & liked it enough to buy this one. The price was good and so was the book. I wish there was another one as it's open ended & I'd love for the story to continue.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2023
    Bought this book to find out how things turned out from the first book. I have researched the actual Agenda 21 Project, so these books piqued my interest. Although a fictional tale it is based with some truth. I have read many of the reviews on this book and I would disagree with many of them. I was engaged in this book the whole way through. Whether that was due to the writing style or the fact that I already had researched things on my own years ago, I'm not sure. But I would say even if you don't want to believe in "conspiracy theories", this is a great story. I say often, if someone can write a story or make a movie about something, then it is always possible.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2020
    This is a seamless sequel to Agenda 21 Book 1 with the same enlightenment. I liked it because it made me look at current events and people in the news in a different and thought provoking way. I’d recommend this to readers who want a good fast read; to those who read deeply and think about our worlds future; and to those who find peace in their religious beliefs. The two books are a story about how people’s lives change as a result of a world run by atheist authorities. It’s a timely story based upon a real UN Agenda 21.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2025
    Book arrived on time and in excellent condition.
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2015
    This book is truly frightening! Reality at its worst; post apocalyptic life in an America that could be real if we don't pay attention to what is going on around us. Starting with a list of who owns guns! Then collect lots of data and don't teach accurate history. Before you know it, "authorities" rule and "citizens" live in compounds with "earth protectors" (guards) watching their every move! The earth and animals are of highest importance. Compounds and "citizens" have no books, electricity, religion, art, or fun. Food is only something called "nourishment cubes". Even children are taken from parents; there is almost no reason to live. "Citizens" exist only to provide for the rich; there is no freedom! Thought-provoking story that is very readable.
    4 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2022
    Scary as hell. Unfortunately I realize that this is intended to be our future if we don’t stand up for what is right now. Thank you for the entertaining reading. “You will own nothing and like it,” that echos through my mind over and over again reading this.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2020
    When I read the authors' first Agenda 21 novel, I thought it was a superb dystopian view of the living hell into which anti-human environmental elites wish to consign the vast majority of the human race who are to be their serfs. I wrote at the time “This is a book which begs for one or more sequels.” Well, here is the first sequel and it is…disappointing. It's not terrible, by any means, but it does not come up to the high standard set by the first book. Perhaps it suffers from the blahs which often afflict the second volume of a trilogy.

    First of all, if you haven't read the original Agenda 21 you will have absolutely no idea who the characters are, how they found themselves in the situation they're in at the start of the story, and the nature of the tyranny they're trying to escape. As the novel begins, Emmeline, who we met in the previous book, learns that her infant daughter Elsa, with whom she has managed to remain in tenuous contact by working at the Children's Village, where the young are reared by the state apart from their parents, along with other children are to be removed to another facility, breaking this precious human bond. She and her state-assigned partner David rescue Elsa and, joined by a young boy, Micah, escape through a hole in the fence surrounding the compound to the Human Free Zone, the wilderness outside the compounds into which humans have been relocated. In the chaos after the escape, John and Joan, David's parents, decide to also escape, with the intention of leaving a false trail to lead the inevitable pursuers away from the young escapees.

    Indeed, before long, a team of Earth Protection Agents led by Steven, the kind of authoritarian control freak thug who inevitably rises to the top in such organisations, is dispatched to capture the escapees and return them to the compound for punishment (probably “recycling” for the adults) and to serve as an example for other “citizens”. The team includes Julia, a rookie among the first women assigned to Earth Protection.

    The story cuts back and forth among the groups in the Human Free Zone. Emmeline's band meets two people who have lived in a cave ever since escaping the initial relocation of humans to the compounds. They learn the history of the implementation of Agenda 21 and the rudiments of survival outside the tyranny. As the groups encounter one another, the struggle between normal human nature and the cruel and stunted world of the slavers comes into focus.

    Harriet Parke is the principal author of the novel. Glenn Beck acknowledges this in the afterword he contributed which describes the real-world U.N. Agenda 21. Obviously, by lending his name to the project, he increases its visibility and readership, which is all for the good. If there's another book in the series, let's hope it returns to the high standard set by the first.
    5 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Dallas Campbell
    5.0 out of 5 stars A great eye opener of truth wrapped in fiction!
    Reviewed in Canada on October 17, 2019
    Excellent book and author!
  • Dinti
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 23, 2015
    not read yet but will be surprised if not as gripping as the first book
  • Edna
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great read
    Reviewed in Canada on November 7, 2015
    Very well written. I was captivated from the very first page. Would like to see a sequel...."how america was reborn"