Interstellar Fiction: Issue One
Book Details
ISBN / ASINB00C8WMYC0
ISBN-13978B00C8WMYC8
Sales Rank3,059,489
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
The first issue of Interstellar Fiction
Stories you'll find inside:
"Contact Your Granny-10 to the Fourth Power" by Jeff Morris
Alan begins to receive e-mails from one of his distant descendants in the future.
"Arlena's House" by Barton Paul Levenson
Arlena lives in her own starship with amenities to satisfy her every want. But it's missing one crucial element.
"A Better Tomorrow" by Alex Shvartsman
On a spaceship en route to Mars, Brett Cole must be prepared in case anything goes wrong
"Four-by-Four" by Alexis A. Hunter
Have you ever wondered what it would be like living in the future? This is the story about a couple living together in an overpopulated society and the length to which the government tries to fix it.
"Fusion" by Grant Gougler
In a future where the music industry's executive layer is comprised of digitized personalities, the singer of a rock band deals with the pressures of rock stardom.
"Jack" by Megan J. Hesse
On lookout patrol on the Ark, Captain Gellert spends his time chatting with his computer, Jack, and remembers
"Planned Obsolescence" by Doug C. Souza
A vintage farm-robot faces a dilemma when his owner decides to try and repair it himself instead of following manufacturing protocols.
Stories you'll find inside:
"Contact Your Granny-10 to the Fourth Power" by Jeff Morris
Alan begins to receive e-mails from one of his distant descendants in the future.
"Arlena's House" by Barton Paul Levenson
Arlena lives in her own starship with amenities to satisfy her every want. But it's missing one crucial element.
"A Better Tomorrow" by Alex Shvartsman
On a spaceship en route to Mars, Brett Cole must be prepared in case anything goes wrong
"Four-by-Four" by Alexis A. Hunter
Have you ever wondered what it would be like living in the future? This is the story about a couple living together in an overpopulated society and the length to which the government tries to fix it.
"Fusion" by Grant Gougler
In a future where the music industry's executive layer is comprised of digitized personalities, the singer of a rock band deals with the pressures of rock stardom.
"Jack" by Megan J. Hesse
On lookout patrol on the Ark, Captain Gellert spends his time chatting with his computer, Jack, and remembers
"Planned Obsolescence" by Doug C. Souza
A vintage farm-robot faces a dilemma when his owner decides to try and repair it himself instead of following manufacturing protocols.
