Accolades for Exodus:“Wow! I was truly impressed by this book. I love when science fiction writers combine science, politics and psychology. For me the mix was just right”“This book is science fiction in great form. It doesn’t just make you think about the future, it really makes you think about the world around you today” When mankind faces extinction, how can anyone survive?In 2072, Earth faces … survive?
In 2072, Earth faces the ultimate extinction event. In an America turned authoritarian, a race against time begins. To send a starship to a distant planet, where the remains of humanity can survive. Only a small number will be chosen for this final endeavor to save mankind from extinction, and among the contenders only the most resourceful will have a chance.
But while the government wants to choose loyal subjects in order to create another version of the society they have engineered, there are those who secretly conspire to let the starfarers choose their own destiny, free from the bonds of their mother world.
As mankind on Earth faces its final blow, the selected few set course for Aurora, more than 40 light years away!
Follow Tina Hammer, scramjet pilot and officer, Kenneth Taylor, Harvard professor and alienated by the nation he once held so dear, Maria Solis, daughter to one of the richest men in the world, a girl who would never have been chosen, except for her dad’s money, on their various paths toward the greatest adventure in human history.
“A race through the end of the Earth – excellent SF”
“Very well written and reads fast and easy in the style of other great sci fi writers such as Randolph Lalonde and Jack Campbell”
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Andreas is becoming one of my favorite contemporary writers — all of the books are well thought out. I hate sci-fi with giant swiss cheese holes in the logic. The premise, the world and the characters all fit together. I’ve signed up for his blog and download his books as soon as he releases them.
Real
Great read! Mankind will live on.
Fiction? Or Future?
Although an excellent idea, the first book in this trilogy leaves much to be desired. The character development is haphazard and the story line has many holes that I believe should have been filled before this book ended.