Books tagged with: clone

  • A Fistful of ClonesSeaton Kay-Smith
    A Fistful of Clones
    by Seaton Kay-Smith
    Science Fiction

    Occasionally a book and a writer comes along that breaks rules left right and centre, but does so with panache and style that makes you tip your hat. The beginning of A Fistful of Clones clearly sets it out to be one of those books; an accessible science fiction comedy that immediately endears, the...

  • AmortalsMatt Forbeck
    Amortals
    by Matt Forbeck
    Science Fiction

    Amortals is a science fiction thriller of high octane action and is the novel of Matt Forbeck, published by Angry Robot Books. The year is 2168 and Secret Service agent Ronan "Methusaleh" Dooley is hot on the trail of a vicious killer, but this case is a bit of a twist as the victim happens to be hi...

  • Brave New WorldAldous Huxley
    Brave New World
    by Aldous Huxley
    Science Fiction

    Brave new world was written over 80 years ago; back in 1932 and describes London in the year 2540 - or 632 AF as the year is described in the book. The AF stands for "After Ford", meaning the American industrialist Henry Ford who has become something of a messianic figure in Huxley's World. It's bee...

  • EmbassytownChina Mieville
    Embassytown
    by China Mieville
    Science Fiction

    On the concrete balcony of a third-floor industrial complex in London, China Miéville was speaking earnestly about his early experiences of reading H.P. Lovecraft. He was remembering the Cthulhu. They were, he said, quite sexy. Three years later and the alien species of Embassytown are a language-im...

  • Imperial EarthArthur C Clarke
    Imperial Earth
    by Arthur C Clarke
    Science Fiction

    There is a particular pleasure in returning to an Arthur C. Clarke novel that nobody talks about much, and Imperial Earth is one of those. It does not have the reputation of 2001 or Rendezvous with Rama , it rarely turns up on best-of lists, and when it is mentioned at all, it tends to be with a sli...

  • Mirror DanceLois McMaster Bujold
    Mirror Dance
    by Lois McMaster Bujold
    Science Fiction

    Mirror Dance is a science fiction novel by the author Lois McMaster Bujold. A friend gave this to me to read after I had given him Use of Weapons by Banks, and again I'm positively surprised at how many excellent writers there are out there - all of which have written tons of books, just waiting for...

  • Passengers to Zeta NinePeter Salisbury
    Passengers to Zeta Nine
    by Peter Salisbury
    Science Fiction

    Passengers to Zeta Nine is a science fiction novel by Peter Salisbury, set within the same universe as Passengers to Sentience. Travelling for one hundred and twenty years, the minds of Raife and Nancy are electronically stored along with six hundred other couples aboard the ship Explorer, bound for...

  • Tales of Time and SpacePat Castaldo
    Tales of Time and Space
    by Pat Castaldo
    Science Fiction

    Tales of Time and Space is a collection of science fiction short stories by Pat Castaldo. There are 27 short stories contained within this book, all written by Pat Castaldo. The short stories are: The Immune Man Dr Barron's Boy The Pottery method My other self the test the galactic inn for sale at o...

  • The Book of AdamRobert M Hopper
    The Book of Adam
    by Robert M Hopper
    Science Fiction

    The Book of Adam: Autobiography of the first human clone is a science fiction novel and the debut of Robert M Hopper. On February 22, 1997, the world was shocked with the announcement that a lamb named Dolly had been born, the first mammal cloned from adult cells. The reaction was largely one of out...

  • The Dark Side of TechnologyMark Antony Rossi
    The Dark Side of Technology
    by Mark Antony Rossi
    Science Fiction

    The Dark Side of Technology is a science fiction novel by Mark Antony Rossi. The tale of the mad scientist is even older than the Shelly novel of Frankenstein. Since the dawn of the written word man has tried to altered his appearance, environment or internal makeup in a vain attempt to gain more po...

  • The Fictional ManAl Ewing
    The Fictional Man
    by Al Ewing
    Science Fiction

    Imagine a world where cloning was not only advanced enough to create real bodies but where the technology was inexpensive and simple enough to be viable on a large scale. Of course making copies of real people would be wrong and there would bound to be a law against such a thing but what if a loopho...

  • The Unreal & The Real: Outer Space, Inner LandsUrsula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    This second volume in a collected anthology of Ursula Le Guin’s work showcases more of her Science Fiction and fantasy stories and has a more prominent escapist theme than the first. Her introduction to this volume is deeply insightful, commenting on the writer’s perspective of genre being more abou...

  • Where Late the Sweet Birds SangKate Wilhelm
    Science Fiction

    Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang is a Hugo award winning post-apocalyptic tale of human cloning. For the Sumner family the recent droughts, floods, blighted crops, pandemic plagues and rising sterility all point to the demise of the human race. Their isolated farm in the Appalachian Mountains provide...

  • Captain America: Dark designsStefan Petrucha
    Captain America: Dark designs
    by Stefan Petrucha
    Science Fiction

    There is an inherent problem with superheroes. Sometimes they are just too super. How is any mortal person meant to take down a being that can fly into the sun or bounce bullets off their bracelets? It is up to the comic creators to come up with an enemy that will match the super heroics with super...

  • Mickey7Edward Ashton
    Mickey7
    by Edward Ashton
    Science Fiction

    If I lived in a Star Trek universe I would always travel by shuttlecraft and refuse to use the transporter. I am just uneasy with the idea of being split into atoms and reformed elsewhere. I am, for all intents and purposes, the same person, with the same memories, but am I? Is it not true that one...

  • Constance Verity Saves the WorldA Lee Martinez
    Science Fiction

    Constance Verity is anything but normal, blessed as a child to live an adventurous life, this may sound exciting, but the reality is much different. Now in her 30s, she is fed up with having to save the world all the time and just wants some normal downtime. By Constance Verity Saves the World , som...

  • Thirteen Ways to Kill Lulabelle RockMaud Woolf
    Science Fiction

    Wouldn’t it be great to be in more than one place at once? Rather than having to do all those boring jobs you could make a version of yourself to do it for you, leaving time for you to do what you really want, like playing too many computer games or reading too many books. Before you know it, you ma...

  • Star Wars: SanctuaryLamar Giles
    Star Wars: Sanctuary
    by Lamar Giles
    Science Fiction

    I have always appeciated the rich tapestry that the extended Star Wars Universe has given the reader. Whilst the films are few and far between, and the TV shows more abundant but still limited, it is the books that allow fans to deep dive into characters and places that may not get as much love on t...

  • The Fractal EpisodesAllen Stroud
    The Fractal Episodes
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    What differentiates a short story series from episodes? Allen Stroud’s The Fractal Series comes in a collection or can be read separately. There are twelve individual stories, that sounds like a short story collection, but there is a difference as they all take place within the Fearless universe tha...