Remember way back in the fall of 2020 when my review of Nophek Gloss by Essa Hansen proclaimed that it was the start of a trilogy that you’d want to get your hands on? The sequel and middle book of that trilogy Azura Ghost keeps that promise and doubles down with fury and vengeance, love and compassion, and with a book that really does put the science back into science fiction.
Declassify >Edge of the World Broadcast Season Two: Listening is Advised!
As a continuation to Season One, the new voices, the new perspectives, and the new twists have turned Edge of the World Broadcast into an even more engaging and engrossing story.
Adding voices and characters to the story has not only added to the anxiety of the situation, it has also ratcheted up the complexity.
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Coupland’s Characters Speak to Me Beyond Grief in ‘Hey Nostradamus’
As one of the younger persons in the generation that Douglas Coupland arguably named Generation X, it is no surprise that he can write so methodically and philosophically about tragedy and grief.
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Dragon’s Milk offers a cup full of life lessons
Dragon’s Milk by Susan Fletcher has been sitting on my shelf since elementary school. Did I read it back then? I have no recollection, but I decided it was finally time to read it. Let me tell you, for a book that was published in 1989, this book is incredibly relevant and was surely ahead of its time.
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Crichton’s Next is a TED Talk with a novel preamble
Next is a masterful chaotic mess combining real science and science fiction so seamlessly that you have no idea what is or isn’t fabricated or researched unless you have a Ph.D., which I don’t. It asks and deals with a lot of bioethical issues and raises as many concerns as it does questions.
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