Author: | Paul Brockman | ISBN: | 9781476107509 |
Publisher: | Paul Brockman | Publication: | June 30, 2012 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Paul Brockman |
ISBN: | 9781476107509 |
Publisher: | Paul Brockman |
Publication: | June 30, 2012 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
In a depressed mill town, out-of-work history teacher Jonathan Strange has reached a low point in a life liberally pockmarked with low points.
On a planet many light-years distant, isolated bands of natives offer human sacrifices to their gods.
Deep in the galactic core ancient beings make a decision that will profoundly affect the future of humanity.
In the velvet darkness between the stars a nova-born lump of cosmic slag is on a collision course with a populated space station.
These are threads of a tapestry that bind Jonathan Strange to his destiny.
In the far past a patient and resourceful thinking machine, its purpose known only to its ancient makers, created a prophecy. Now that prophecy is about to be fulfilled in the person of Jonathan Strange. It will lead him from beggar to king; from the bleak winter of his despair to the golden summer of his eventual triumph—and slightly beyond
In a depressed mill town, out-of-work history teacher Jonathan Strange has reached a low point in a life liberally pockmarked with low points.
On a planet many light-years distant, isolated bands of natives offer human sacrifices to their gods.
Deep in the galactic core ancient beings make a decision that will profoundly affect the future of humanity.
In the velvet darkness between the stars a nova-born lump of cosmic slag is on a collision course with a populated space station.
These are threads of a tapestry that bind Jonathan Strange to his destiny.
In the far past a patient and resourceful thinking machine, its purpose known only to its ancient makers, created a prophecy. Now that prophecy is about to be fulfilled in the person of Jonathan Strange. It will lead him from beggar to king; from the bleak winter of his despair to the golden summer of his eventual triumph—and slightly beyond