Supersymmetry
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.13 (653 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1633880982 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 303 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-03-27 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
This is the way sci-fi ought to be.”—WALL STREET JOURNAL“An expanding universe of delight.” —WASHINGTON POST “Gripping, suspenseful and original, this is a page-turning novel that readers are sure to devour. "Thrills and spills and sheer excitement on full-throttle overdrive."—KIRKUS REVIEWS“This sequel to Superposition is just as excellent as the first. Fast-paced, mind-bending, super-scientific yet fully accessible and very understandable to the layman reader. Full of new possibilities and probabilities, Supersymmetry gives readers a peek into what the future may hold and the cost that comes with it. This is a science fiction novel full of humanity and all its inherent beauty and ugliness.”—RT BOOK REVIEWS
Renee T. said Quantum fun. Walton is such a joy to read. How cool is it a day-job, science guy likes to write fiction too? In addition to complex characters set in a frenzied, what-next (?) plot, the reader is submerged in a Tim Burton world of not quite today, not quite the future. The best in his series.. A hard-science thriller A. J Terry Walton’s previous book in this series, Superposition, resolves without any hint of a sequel, so I was rather surprised to see this one published. Like Superposition, Supersymmetry is a fast-paced, high-tech, near-future, hard science fiction thriller that aims to keep you on the . mhnstr said A fast paced and enjoyable story. Supersymmetry by David Walton begins fifteen years after the events that take place in the prior book, Superposition. While the protagonist of Superposition was the physicist, Jacob Kelley, he only plays a minor role in Supersymmetry and instead the story focuses on the “twins&rd
. By day, he works on classified defense technology, which not even the hamsters are allowed to know about. He lives near Philadelphia with his wife, seven children, and three hamsters. David's fiction explores themes that skirt the edges of science and religion, such as human origins, the nature of truth, the certainty of death, and the nature of the soul. David Walton is the author of Superposition, Quintesse
Ryan Oronzi is a paranoid, neurotic, and brilliant physicist who has developed a quantum military technology that could make soldiers nearly invincible in the field. The technology, however, gives power to the quantum creature known as the varcolac, which slowly begins to manipulate Dr. Oronzi and take over his mind. Oronzi eventually becomes the unwilling pawn of the varcolac in its bid to control the world.The creature immediately starts attacking those responsible for defeating it fifteen years earlier, including Sandra and Alex Kelley—the two versions of Alessandra Kelley who are still living as separate people. The two young women must fight the varcolac, despite the fact that defeating it may mean resolving once again into a single person.