Author: | Robert Jacobi | ISBN: | 9780990631804 |
Publisher: | TeBo Publishing | Publication: | November 22, 2014 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Robert Jacobi |
ISBN: | 9780990631804 |
Publisher: | TeBo Publishing |
Publication: | November 22, 2014 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
Jarzen Tadel and his family live on the peaceful agrarian planet Elapsis, and are easy prey for the Tar-Que, whose high council is obsessed with developing anything that will provide them with an intellectual advantage in a war in their home solar system . . . . A scientist befriends Jarzen and sets him on a path to higher education. Jarzen runs afoul of the Provincial Governor and is condemned to a horrible project as a human test subject; a project trying to harvest the vast energy of lightning to supercharge and expand the human mind, a project whose test subjects have an almost zero survival rate. Jarzen's body is safely strapped to a large, metal chair with wires, electrodes, and probes attached directly to his brain. The full fury of an Ion Storm is in its lightning, which has a direct line into Jarzen's brain, Something goes terribly right. Lab rat no more. . . . .
Jarzen Tadel and his family live on the peaceful agrarian planet Elapsis, and are easy prey for the Tar-Que, whose high council is obsessed with developing anything that will provide them with an intellectual advantage in a war in their home solar system . . . . A scientist befriends Jarzen and sets him on a path to higher education. Jarzen runs afoul of the Provincial Governor and is condemned to a horrible project as a human test subject; a project trying to harvest the vast energy of lightning to supercharge and expand the human mind, a project whose test subjects have an almost zero survival rate. Jarzen's body is safely strapped to a large, metal chair with wires, electrodes, and probes attached directly to his brain. The full fury of an Ion Storm is in its lightning, which has a direct line into Jarzen's brain, Something goes terribly right. Lab rat no more. . . . .