Three Traveling Women Writers: Cross-Cultural Perspectives of Brazil, Patagonia, and the U.S., 1859-79
Book
This book presents an alternative framework for reading nineteenth century women's travel narratives...
What's it Like in Space?: Stories from Astronauts Who've Been There
Ariel Waldman and Brian Standeford
Book
Everyone wonders what it's really like in space, but very few of us ever have the chance to...
The Left Hand of Darkness: Book in the Hainish Series
Book
Winter is an Earth-like planet with two major differences: conditions are semi artic even at the...
Everything
Video Game Watch
Everything is an interactive experience where everything you see is a thing you can be, from animals...
Simulation Role Playing Game Adventure
Buddy Complex: Kanketsu-hen - Ano Sora ni Kaeru Mirai de (Sub Season)
TV Season
The two part finale of Buddy Complex television series deals with the final battle between the Free...
Mecha Time Travel
Super Extra Grande
Yoss and David Frye
Book
“Intergalactic space travel meets outrageous, biting satire in Super Extra Grande…. Its author...
Science fiction
Isabel Smith (34 KP) rated Obscura in Books
Jun 28, 2018
When an old colleague that now works for NASA offers her the opportunity to continue her Losian’s research with unlimited funding, she’s hesitant to take him up on the proposition because he wants something from her in return: to accompany a group into space and study the inhabitants of a United Nations space station who are experiencing neurological side effects due to working on a top-secret NASA project. Even though she hates the idea of leaving her daughter behind for six months, she knows she can’t pass up an opportunity like this and so she agrees to the terms.
Almost from the moment she steps off the space shuttle and onto the space station (or is it?) things begin to feel off. Her research assistant, Birk Lindqvist, starts experiencing major hallucinations and she is sedated once she discovers a startling truth that was initially kept hidden from her. Everything is called into question and nothing is at it seems. What’s really going on? Where is the station they’re supposed to be rendezvousing with? And why does it feel like there is a hidden presence on board with her after everyone goes into stasis?
Obscura is a heart-pounding, adrenaline-filled thriller set in the vastness of space. Is that great or what? The prospect of reading a psychological thriller combined with a space mission story is what initially attracted me to the novel. Joe Hart does not disappoint with his ability to blend the two genres seamlessly. He even tossed in the element of the ‘unreliable narrator’ with Gillian for a little while there during her opioid abuse and withdrawal periods where readers couldn’t judge which of her experiences were real and which ones weren’t. Genius! I loved every bit of it: the deception, the uncertainty, the space travel, the action scenes, the startling discoveries…everything!
Transforming Gender, Sex, Place, and Space: Geographies of Gender Variance
Book
Transgender, gender variant, and intersex people are in every sector of all societies yet little is...
All About Space Magazine
Book and Magazines & Newspapers
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Every issue of All About Space delivers fascinating articles and features on all aspects of space...