CountDawn. Book 1. The Book of Snow

Adventure
Distopic

Choose your future before your future chooses you.

It’s 2069. A hostile life form has merged with technology and enslaved humanity. A band of rebels risk everything to send one fragile book back in time — a warning that could change history. What we hold in our hands is that book. CountDawn. The Book of Snow is both testimony and prophecy: a dystopian saga where memory becomes resistance, and where words themselves might save the future.

  • A cast of unforgettable rebels – Peake, Clo, Dawn, Lazar, Mogwly… each with scars and gifts, bound together by loyalty, sacrifice, and the dream of freedom.
  • Originality on the international stage. Unlike most dystopias centered on spectacle or romance, CountDawn blends literary depth, meta-fiction, and fast-paced adventure, placing memory, culture, and heritage at the core of the fight for the future.
Publisher: Piemme
Target: 12+
Year: 2026
Author
Pierdomenico Baccalario

Pierdomenico Baccalario has been writing children’s novels since 1997, when he won the Il Battello a Vapore literary prize with La strada del Guerriero (The Way of the Warrior) using his neighbour’s name. Since then, his bestsellers have been written under as many pseudonyms (the best known being Ulysses Moore and Irene Adler), translated into more than thirty languages and published with major Italian and foreign publishers. He has collaborated with Lucca Comics & Games for more than twenty years, has written for Repubblica and is a columnist for the newspaper Corriere della Sera’s La Lettura literary supplement. In 2014, he founded the Book on a Tree creative agency in London.

 

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Author
Marco Magnone

Marco Magnone is one of Italy's most acclaimed and sought-after children's authors by schools, festivals and reading groups. Thanks to these engagements, he meets thousands of young readers every year. His stories, which have earned him two nominations for the Strega Ragazze e Ragazzi Prize, often blend various genres but share a common goal: to explore the profound meaning of growing up. He teaches narrative at the Holden School in Turin and at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Milan.

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