Some facts:
- The genre is hard science fiction and the book is 163,000 words long.
- Each installment is around 5,000 words long.
- There will be a total of 26 installments.
- Each installment will have at least one or two full-color illustrations, some may have more.
Comfort Zones and Other Anthropolitical Constructs:
A Far Reaches Novel
Their world is a glittering lattice of pods above a spectacular waterfall, surrounded by wilderness teeming with phosphorescent, gloriously varied life.
Inside their arcology, humans lack for nothing. Content in their machine-guided stasis of many cultures, screened from reality by holotechnology and a vast experiential database stored in their own bodies, they buy and sell, eat and sing, consume entertainments and, very occasionally, venture to the more rugged but equally sheltered “Outside” settlement to feel adventurous.
Some can breathe the air, and most of their descendants someday will; this is a young colony: it will be generations upon generations before the majority of humans, all the different phenomes assembled here from a thousand planets, have evolved enough to live free on the surface.
But all has not gone to plan. Long ago, an accident in space cut the machine brains in the arcologies loose from their overseers, the much more sophisticated computers in orbit.
The disaster could not be predicted. Suddenly, those who survive must face a hostile atmosphere, dangerous wildlife, deprivation, and, perhaps most challenging, self agency.
The remaining societal structures overwhelmed, things growing desperate, a group of new friends thrown together from multiple cultural backgrounds rally an expedition to seek aid, against all odds, stalked by two human monsters.
If you have read the book, please consider leaving a rating and review below. I would deeply appreciate it.
Above: one of two illustrations in Part 01
Above: one of two illustrations in Part 02
Above: one of two illustrations in Part 03
Above: One of three illustrations in part 04
Above: one of the illustrations for part 5
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I am not really a fan of science fiction, but I really enjoyed this novel. Characters were well-developed and their thoughts and actions, even when surprising to the reader, were very believable. The bad guys were not ALL bad (but they were very bad, in delicious ways), nor were the good guys ALL good. I would love to see the author attempt a more traditional novel with sub-apocalyptic tensions and trials.