Fotografía de autor

Mel Keegan

Autor de Fortunes of War

36+ Obras 745 Miembros 14 Reseñas 4 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye el nombre: Mel Keegan

Nota de desambiguación:

(eng) A pseudonym.

Series

Obras de Mel Keegan

Fortunes of War (1995) 112 copias
Death's Head (1991) 103 copias
Storm Tide (1996) 55 copias
Aquamarine (2000) 55 copias
Ice, Wind and Fire (1989) 54 copias
Equinox (1993) 51 copias
White Rose of Night (1995) 51 copias
An East Wind Blowing (1999) 51 copias
Scorpio (2004) 18 copias
Dangerous Moonlight (2006) 17 copias
The Deceivers (2003) 17 copias
Nocturne (2004) 15 copias
Aphelion (2007) 14 copias
The Swordsman (2004) 13 copias
Stopover (2007) 13 copias
Ground Zero (2009) 9 copias
Windrage 9 copias
More Than Human (2012) 9 copias
Twilight (2005) 8 copias
The Lords Of Harbendane (2008) 8 copias
Home from the Sea (2013) 7 copias
Mindspace (2010) 7 copias
Hellgate: Probe (2006) 5 copias
Hellgate: Cry Liberty (2005) 5 copias
Hellgate: Deep Sky (2003) 5 copias
Flashpoint (Hellgate #5) (2011) 4 copias
Tiger, Tiger 4 copias
Event Horizon (2013) 3 copias
Falconstone (2018) 2 copias
Breakheart 1 copia
Umbriel (2010) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Swords of the Rainbow: Gay & Lesbian Fantasy Adventures (1996) — Contribuidor — 101 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male
Nacionalidad
Australia
Lugares de residencia
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Aviso de desambiguación
A pseudonym.

Miembros

Reseñas

The year is 2190, and the first starship of Earth, the Gilgamesh, is plying between the homeworlds and the new world of Eidolon, a five-year flight at near-lightspeed. The "starshippers" have been idolized for many decades, since the first landing on Eidolon. They're "augmented" humans ... they've been modified for the work and for the new world. The public has envied them and emulated them -- and perhaps they have been emulated too much, too often.

Eventually, perhaps inevitably, a political movement has begun back on Earth. Calling itself The Pure Light, its campaign is to "Keep Humanity Human" ... to stem the tide of the genetic modification that was steadily remaking humans into more and more different forms.

Twenty years ago, The Pure Light rode into office on this ticket, and their policies have made the augmented humans illegal. They're now categorized as borgs, or cyborgs -- artificial life forms who do not have full human rights. The more augmented the individual, the less rights he or she has, and by the time one is a "fifty" -- one whose body is fifty percent modified -- one is registered, licensed, and control-chipped, in the possession of the government, and assigned to the military, industry or the lab.

It's been more than twenty years since the Gilgamesh cruised into Earth space. At home on Eidolon, the crew are free -- many of them were bred and born there, designed for the new world and thriving there. Now, they're entering space where they're perceived as unwelcome aliens...

And it's the job of Civil Representative Adrian Balfour to journey out to Titan Central, meet Captain Dirk Vanderhoven and his Executive Officer, Jason Erickson, and inform them that the crew of the Gilgamesh is to be taken into custody -- registered, licensed, control-chipped, and reassigned for the battlefield, the mines, the lab.

But Adrian is nursing a secret agenda of his own, and everything in his cosmos changes the moment he sets eyes on young Jason Erickson. Almost before he knows what he's doing, he's lying to the Titan Central commander and life is set to become a race against time.

Because Adrian is a "twenty," and unwelcome even at home, while among the fifties of the starshipper crew he's respected, cherished -- and desired by at least one of them. Romance explodes between Adrian and Jason, white-hot and filled with the piquancy of exploration, as Adrian discovers how the humans of Eidolon are different in every way from the Earthborns, most of all in their sensuality.

For Adrian, the next days are critical. He'll be "tested" by the big, beautiful fifty with whom he's fallen deeply in love, and he'll risk everything in the desperate attempt to get the Gilgamesh out of Earth space before warships can run her down, and The Pure Light will turn starshippers into control-chipped drones.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Karen74Leigh | otra reseña | Oct 24, 2022 |
I much prefer the paperback cover.
 
Denunciada
Lillian_Francis | 2 reseñas más. | Jul 26, 2021 |
I much prefer the paperback cover.
 
Denunciada
Lillian_Francis | 2 reseñas más. | Feb 24, 2021 |
An ARe Cafe top pick!

More Than Human is set in a world where people can augment themselves and be virtually anything they want. Dancers get longer, stronger legs, athletes have enhanced muscles, and starshipmen can interface directly with AI computers. What starts out as something that everyone longs to do (augmentation) to better themselves is ripped apart when the Pure Light wins Earth’s government. They’re motto is “keep humans human”. They declare all augmented humans illegal. If you are augmented 20% no one will hire you; 30% and you are no longer a human and need a sponsor; 50% and you become a thing belonging to the government with a computer chip in your brain to ensure absolute obedience.

What happens though if you’ve been in space for the last five years and before that on the colony world of Eidolon? Turns out that the moment you dock every 50% (which is basically the entire crew) will be chipped and forced to serve the government. This is where one of our heroes, Adrian, comes in. He’s a 20% and is only able to find work with the dreaded government that he hates. His latest assignment is to smooth the way for the Gilgamesh’s (spaceship) crew and have them hand over the ship and their freedom. He’s not prepared for the ship’s AI specialist Jason, or just how much the heat between them affects Adrian. Jason on the other hand, is instantly attracted to Adrian, but realizes there’s more than meets the eye to this government official and the situation on Earth.

This was a fabulous sci-fi novel. The romance is a major driving factor, but the authors don’t skimp on the AI Interfacing details, or the descriptions of the augmentations. The Pure Light right now is this evil force that chips the 50%, but doesn’t actually have a real face attached to it to make it a true villain. I hope that there’s a sequel in the works because we meet a lot of good characters and the Mavericks (50%s who escaped during the first roundup) need to have their stories told. The ending also came along too soon and I didn’t want it to conclude without ever getting to see Jason’s homeworld of Eidolon. Mel Keegan has proved time and again that love can conquer, and sweetness can be found just around the corner.

~
Bitten by Books for ARe Cafe
… (más)
 
Denunciada
AReCafe | otra reseña | Apr 24, 2013 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
36
También por
1
Miembros
745
Popularidad
#34,104
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
14
ISBNs
41
Favorito
4

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