Niall Harrison
Auteur de British Science Fiction & Fantasy: Twenty Years and Two Surveys
A propos de l'auteur
Œuvres de Niall Harrison
Strange Horizons: The First Fifteen Years 4 exemplaires
Strange Horizons Hugo eBook 2015 3 exemplaires
Strange Horizons, July 2012 — Directeur de publication — 2 exemplaires
Strange Horizons, November 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, August 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, September 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, October 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, Week of 3 March 2013 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, December 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, January 2017 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, February 2017 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, May 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, June 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, March 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, April 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, Week of 12 August 2013 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, February 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, January 2016 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, December 2015 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, November 2015 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, October 2015 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, September 2015 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons: Fund Drive Special 2016 — Directeur de publication — 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons: Fund Drive Special 2015 1 exemplaire
Fantasy and SF: The Roots of Genre 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, Week of 30 September 2013 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons, Week of 9 September 2013 1 exemplaire
Strange Horizons Hugo voters Ebook 2016 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Sexe
- male
Membres
Critiques
Prix et récompenses
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 32
- Aussi par
- 2
- Membres
- 58
- Popularité
- #284,346
- Évaluation
- 3.8
- Critiques
- 3
- ISBN
- 2
-- Terra Nullius by Hanuš Seiner, translated by Julie Nováková, narrated by Anaea Lay - DNF
I needed a little more hand holding for what our MC was doing and where.
"The liquid stops resisting my movements" (when were they resisting?)
"And then they come. The Stars." (but they are inside something)
"turn down the light, and as my eyes get used to the dark, I find thousands. They are everywhere. Above my head, far beneath me. I see the unmistakable cross of Cygnus, Deneb shining like a bright diamond. I see Lyra cradling Vega in her starry palm. Yes, it cannot possibly be they, but human imagination finds familiar shapes in any complex pattern. The illusion is so perfect that I have to look at my legs to assure myself they're still stuck in the diving fins. Their movements, as seen in the superfluid enzyme cocktail, are indistinguishable from movements in space. Even the bubbles from my breathing apparatus nanocavitate, disappear, and turn into a fine mist resembling the freezing vapors of gases expanding into vacuum.
The brain refuses to believe what the eyes are seeing.
This must be space. It must be the vast interstellar void.
Yet it's not. The stars are just phosphorescent polyps on the inner epithelial membrane."
and I'm out.… (plus d'informations)