by Sean Ferrel Illustrations by Charles Santoso Adam is so excited when he receives his present! He quickly unwraps it and there it is... Koala... Adam doesn't like Koala. Koala looks terrifying. Mom and dad insist in Adam sleep with Koala, and Adam insist in put Koala away. But when something eve...
Time travel. It`s an overused science fiction plot device, but one that still has some life to it, provided you can either offer the reader a new spin, or find a new way to incorporate it into a story that uses it, but doesn`t rely upon it. Ferrell does both, providing us with a weary time traveler ...
See my review of this book, and many more, at TalesfromtheGreatEastRoad.wordpress.com. Time travel can be messy business. Especially if you celebrate your birthday every year with your former and future selves in an abandoned hotel, watching your younger selves get unashamedly drunk, whilst your o...
Review on Bookgasm soon.
3.5 Stars This review originally posted at The BiblioSanctum.So every once in a while, I'll come across a book that's just so extraordinary and bizarre that I find myself struggling for the right words to describe it. I both love and hate it when this happens. Love, because chances are it's probably...
Please find my review here: http://audiobookreviewer.com/Audiobook-detail/man-in-the-empty-suit/
My brain feels something like this after reading this novel: full of explosions. The Paradox Problem has always been an issue when a good author takes on time travel. Sean Ferrell not only takes on the Paradox Problem, but throws it in your face. The book has a little bit of a Doctor Who in Pompe...
I'm a sucker for all kinds of narratives that mess around with the meta-, and not just the pomo hijinks beloved by (some of us) academics. For instance, I love heist films (where there's inevitably a long stretch planning the theft, where a version of the story is rehearsed, only to have that story...
The old man’s rheumy eyes watered at me. “Welcome to the secret club of the convention, boy. Now you know. This is where you die.”Safe time travel requires rules, and the narrator of this one sticks to his, especially when he, every 365 days, returns to April 1, 2071 at a deserted hotel in a ruined ...