- eBooks
- >
- Earth is not Alone
Earth is not Alone
SKU:
$3.49
$3.49
Unavailable
per item
This is a unique science fiction story that will blow your mind a story like has never been written before. Imagine what would happen if a large spaceship landed near the Washington Monument on the green belt in Washington D.C. unexpectedly one morning. Are the aliens here to help us or harm us, what do they want?
As the story goes the aliens are here to save Earth from ourselves with all the evil that is going on in the world. Using methods that no human would ever be able to use.Earth is not Alone
As the story goes the aliens are here to save Earth from ourselves with all the evil that is going on in the world. Using methods that no human would ever be able to use.Earth is not Alone
A Review of Earth is Not Alone by Darren James
I have really enjoyed the explosion of indie sci-fi authors with the advent of the electronic reading age. It makes sense that such an advancement would make it possible for so many new stories and sagas to become available. In the past, books lucky enough to be published were chosen by the publishers based almost solely on financial gain and not how good the book was. Sure, some good ones snuck through, but a lot of the really great ones never saw the bookstore shelves.
I'm glad I had the chance to read and review Earth is Not Alone by Darren James. The first few paragraphs of the book grabbed my attention with the premise that not only was the Earth not alone, but that we were being watched. I'm not talking about being watched in a Falling Skies or Independence Day kind of watched. I'm talking about being watched in a United Planetary Nations of the Universe kind of way. We're being watched by an assembled group of leaders and representatives from a multitude of other planets and systems.
The book deals a lot with how an enlightened more advanced group of planet governments would view us and our problems. Things like Muslim terrorists, prison incarceration rates, and the possibility of nuclear catastrophe worry and interest them to the point that they've decided action must be taken.
I don't want to give the book away by revealing too much, but if you're a fan of utopian-seeking science fiction, you'll really enjoy this book. Like others in that realm of thought, utopia is not always easily found and not everyone lives, but, in my opinion, not everyone who perishes in this book causes me to shed a tear. You may not agree with everything the aliens do to help us, but each solution does provide an excellent point of debate, and that's what we need. Talk these problems into a solution instead of just talking for the sake of the noise.
Doc Beaker
I have really enjoyed the explosion of indie sci-fi authors with the advent of the electronic reading age. It makes sense that such an advancement would make it possible for so many new stories and sagas to become available. In the past, books lucky enough to be published were chosen by the publishers based almost solely on financial gain and not how good the book was. Sure, some good ones snuck through, but a lot of the really great ones never saw the bookstore shelves.
I'm glad I had the chance to read and review Earth is Not Alone by Darren James. The first few paragraphs of the book grabbed my attention with the premise that not only was the Earth not alone, but that we were being watched. I'm not talking about being watched in a Falling Skies or Independence Day kind of watched. I'm talking about being watched in a United Planetary Nations of the Universe kind of way. We're being watched by an assembled group of leaders and representatives from a multitude of other planets and systems.
The book deals a lot with how an enlightened more advanced group of planet governments would view us and our problems. Things like Muslim terrorists, prison incarceration rates, and the possibility of nuclear catastrophe worry and interest them to the point that they've decided action must be taken.
I don't want to give the book away by revealing too much, but if you're a fan of utopian-seeking science fiction, you'll really enjoy this book. Like others in that realm of thought, utopia is not always easily found and not everyone lives, but, in my opinion, not everyone who perishes in this book causes me to shed a tear. You may not agree with everything the aliens do to help us, but each solution does provide an excellent point of debate, and that's what we need. Talk these problems into a solution instead of just talking for the sake of the noise.
Doc Beaker