Photo de l'auteur

Kirsten Miller (1) (1973–)

Auteur de Nightmares!

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Kirsten Miller, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

16+ oeuvres 5,007 utilisateurs 273 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Kirsten Miller is an American novelist and the creator of the Kiki Strike book series. Her first book, Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City came out in 2006, The Empress's Tomb, came out in October 2007. Her new book, The Eternal Ones, was released in August 2010. Kirsten Miller lives and works in afficher plus New York City. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Séries

Œuvres de Kirsten Miller

Nightmares! (2014) 863 exemplaires
The Eternal Ones (2010) 770 exemplaires
The Change (2022) 552 exemplaires
Otherworld (2017) 458 exemplaires
Kiki Strike: The Empress's Tomb (2007) 351 exemplaires
How to Lead a Life of Crime (2013) 276 exemplaires
Nightmares! The Sleepwalker Tonic (2015) 209 exemplaires
All You Desire (2011) 198 exemplaires
OtherEarth (2018) 142 exemplaires
Nightmares! The Lost Lullaby (2016) 96 exemplaires
Don't Tell a Soul (2021) 90 exemplaires
Kiki Strike: The Darkness Dwellers (2013) 83 exemplaires
OtherLife (2019) 83 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Cornered: 14 Stories of Bullying and Defiance (2012) — Contributeur — 48 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1973
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA

Membres

Critiques

I thought this book was a complete waste of time and disliked the protagonists' assumption that murder is an appropriate way to change the world.
 
Signalé
maryelisa | 23 autres critiques | Jan 16, 2024 |
Simon thought Otherworld was a game. Turns out he knew nothing. Otherworld is the next phase of reality. It’s everything you’ve ever wanted.

And it’s about to change humanity forever.

Jason Segel and Kristen Miller created a wonderful realistic world.

The story is told from the perspective of 18-year-old Simon who arrives in Otherworld for the sole objective of getting his best friend, and his childhood sweetheart Kat to talk to him! His first expedition into this new virtual reality game world is facilitated via a VR headset and app and it is just that, A game. If you die you get re set and sent back to the beginning, no harm done. But it soon becomes apparent that not all is as it seems in Otherworld or even in the Real World for Simon.

After a tragic accident leaves Kat with very rare Locked In Syndrome she is selected to take part in a trial for a new software that is believed will help people with this type of illness or disability to lead a better type of life. The creators of Otherworld have made a new world, The White City, that can be accessed via a VR visor and a disk that attach’s to the back of the head. Once attached it transports you into The White City and allows the wearer to freely walk around and make the life you have always wanted whist your body is stored in the real world, broken and on a similar set up to Life Support.

There is however 1 big difference, players wearing a headset are visitors to this new virtual world and can choose to leave, the players wearing the disk are there in a more real way. If they die in Otherworld they also die in the real world.

As others living close to Simon and Kat become involved in “accidents” and are also diagnosed with Locked In Syndrome, Simon begins to suspect The Company and Otherworld isn’t what he once believed. He manages to acquire a disk and enter Otherworld to save Kat in both the real world and the Otherworld.

This is a really enjoyable, fast paced read and even though it is advertised as a Young Adult book, I am quite considerably older and I loved it!! Even though the characters are older teenagers they still seem relatable in a lot of ways and likeable. For a Sci-Fi Fantasy novel aspects of the storyline don’t seem that far-fetched either, VR headsets are widely available to us already so an entire Otherworld isn’t pushing the bounds of potential to far. But there are also the fantasy aspects that make this a really good story and keep it entertaining throughout.

The end is a bit sudden if not unexpected but I guess this was done on purpose setting us up for book 2. Hopefully that book wont be too long in becoming a reality!

This book is 100% definitely worth a read for young and old, it is a book I could quite happily and easily read again.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
DebTat2 | 27 autres critiques | Oct 13, 2023 |
Simon thought Otherworld was a game. Turns out he knew nothing. Otherworld is the next phase of reality. It’s everything you’ve ever wanted.

And it’s about to change humanity forever.

Jason Segel and Kristen Miller created a wonderful realistic world.

The story is told from the perspective of 18-year-old Simon who arrives in Otherworld for the sole objective of getting his best friend, and his childhood sweetheart Kat to talk to him! His first expedition into this new virtual reality game world is facilitated via a VR headset and app and it is just that, A game. If you die you get re set and sent back to the beginning, no harm done. But it soon becomes apparent that not all is as it seems in Otherworld or even in the Real World for Simon.

After a tragic accident leaves Kat with very rare Locked In Syndrome she is selected to take part in a trial for a new software that is believed will help people with this type of illness or disability to lead a better type of life. The creators of Otherworld have made a new world, The White City, that can be accessed via a VR visor and a disk that attach’s to the back of the head. Once attached it transports you into The White City and allows the wearer to freely walk around and make the life you have always wanted whist your body is stored in the real world, broken and on a similar set up to Life Support.

There is however 1 big difference, players wearing a headset are visitors to this new virtual world and can choose to leave, the players wearing the disk are there in a more real way. If they die in Otherworld they also die in the real world.

As others living close to Simon and Kat become involved in “accidents” and are also diagnosed with Locked In Syndrome, Simon begins to suspect The Company and Otherworld isn’t what he once believed. He manages to acquire a disk and enter Otherworld to save Kat in both the real world and the Otherworld.

This is a really enjoyable, fast paced read and even though it is advertised as a Young Adult book, I am quite considerably older and I loved it!! Even though the characters are older teenagers they still seem relatable in a lot of ways and likeable. For a Sci-Fi Fantasy novel aspects of the storyline don’t seem that far-fetched either, VR headsets are widely available to us already so an entire Otherworld isn’t pushing the bounds of potential to far. But there are also the fantasy aspects that make this a really good story and keep it entertaining throughout.

The end is a bit sudden if not unexpected but I guess this was done on purpose setting us up for book 2. Hopefully that book wont be too long in becoming a reality!

This book is 100% definitely worth a read for young and old, it is a book I could quite happily and easily read again.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
DebTat2 | 27 autres critiques | Oct 13, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
16
Aussi par
1
Membres
5,007
Popularité
#5,005
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
273
ISBN
241
Langues
11
Favoris
2

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