Author: | Blaine Readler | ISBN: | 9780463904565 |
Publisher: | Blaine Readler | Publication: | July 15, 2018 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Blaine Readler |
ISBN: | 9780463904565 |
Publisher: | Blaine Readler |
Publication: | July 15, 2018 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
In pursuit of an extra credit project for her zoology course, Terri stumbles on three ape-like creatures hiding in a makeshift tree house. The fact that there are no apes native to the rainforests of the northwest might be of purely academic interest if it weren’t for the recent nearby knife murder of an old man . . . and that one of the primates brandishes a small sword. The delinquent trio insist that Terri find “properly respectful experts” to help them refuel their small spaceship, warning of dire consequences if not soon achieved. When she explains that no one on Earth can create quantities of antimatter, they set off to find a refueling base that had been brought to Earth thousands of years ago. Thus begins Terri’s adventure with three refugee aliens, so confident in their superiority, even though they use medieval weapons and prefer to live in trees. Other beings have tracked the refugees to Earth, however—an intersection of ancient interstellar rivals with Terri—and Earth—caught smack dab in the middle.
Readler’s tales veer off the beaten track of formula stereotypes, exploring worlds both quirky and mysterious, with whiffs of the whimsical, yet always as familiar as the old pair of shoes you can’t quite let go of. These are high adventures, ragtag expeditions setting off from a doorway right around the corner from your front porch. Readler is the voice of ordinary people caught up in extra-ordinary odysseys.
In pursuit of an extra credit project for her zoology course, Terri stumbles on three ape-like creatures hiding in a makeshift tree house. The fact that there are no apes native to the rainforests of the northwest might be of purely academic interest if it weren’t for the recent nearby knife murder of an old man . . . and that one of the primates brandishes a small sword. The delinquent trio insist that Terri find “properly respectful experts” to help them refuel their small spaceship, warning of dire consequences if not soon achieved. When she explains that no one on Earth can create quantities of antimatter, they set off to find a refueling base that had been brought to Earth thousands of years ago. Thus begins Terri’s adventure with three refugee aliens, so confident in their superiority, even though they use medieval weapons and prefer to live in trees. Other beings have tracked the refugees to Earth, however—an intersection of ancient interstellar rivals with Terri—and Earth—caught smack dab in the middle.
Readler’s tales veer off the beaten track of formula stereotypes, exploring worlds both quirky and mysterious, with whiffs of the whimsical, yet always as familiar as the old pair of shoes you can’t quite let go of. These are high adventures, ragtag expeditions setting off from a doorway right around the corner from your front porch. Readler is the voice of ordinary people caught up in extra-ordinary odysseys.