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  • Format: ePub

A woman living alone in the backwoods of Idaho has an encounter with a strange being who is not of this world. As she learns more about this odd but charming woman, she soon realizes she has an illness that must be cured if she is to survive.
A heartwarming, thought provoking and bittersweet tale that asks the question "what might be beyond our sky?"
Suitable for all audiences.

  • Geräte: eReader
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  • Größe: 6.77MB
Produktbeschreibung
A woman living alone in the backwoods of Idaho has an encounter with a strange being who is not of this world. As she learns more about this odd but charming woman, she soon realizes she has an illness that must be cured if she is to survive.

A heartwarming, thought provoking and bittersweet tale that asks the question "what might be beyond our sky?"

Suitable for all audiences.


Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.

Autorenporträt
Glynda Shaw is a Seattle native, an aerospace engineer, a social worker, and an experimenter in alternative energy and biosystems. "Currently for different reasons, I especially enjoy reading the novels of Patricia Cornwell, Tess Gerritsen, Mary Downing Hahn, Lisa Jackson, Lee Child, John Sandford, Lisa Unger. There are many others of course but those are the ones I drop everything to read when a new title appears. Throughout my life I have enjoyed and respected Poul Anderson Isaac Asimov, A Bertram Chandler, Arthur C. Clarke, Robert Heinlein, Howard Pyle, Mark Twain. More recently; Stephen Baxter, Bernard Cornwell, S. M. Stirling and of course always, Robert Louis Stevenson. I also read a fair amount of history, technology and science. Charles Sheffield, Freeman Dyson and Gerrard K. O'Neil and probably my current favorite writers of speculative technology. My writing influences are varied and include feminism, gender issues, the fact of my own blindness and cultural issues,including my Celtic background and a love of the Pacific Northwest and also of the American South. Most of my life a seem to have been a very small minority yelling about something or other and not always winning but generally remaining on my feet. I try to root my stories in places I've been and can describe credibly. I've been known to take vacations places so I can get the setting right. I like to show my characters making independent decisions and creating lives that fit them even if not acceptable to all of their neighbors. Those are the sorts of people I tend to like also; folks who know stuff and aren't afraid to ask the questions "why not?" and "Why do things have to be this way?" I like to champion things that are old but still good but also new things that are good but not just because they're new and trendy. One of the most charming images I can think of, the author of which has been lost to my memory, was that of a young woman on a horse, surrounded by a force field actuated from the saddle; and she able to tesser from planet to planet, having extraordinary adventures."