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(R)Evolution

von M.E. Purfield

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They tried to kill the ugliness but they only made it stronger. The icecaps melted and the water consumed the shorelines but New York City still stands. All four boroughs prosper thousands of feet over the old metropolis hastily protected by walls. Proper citizens live above in a beautiful, protective dome on concrete stilts and criminals serve life below in the polluted, walled ghost of a city. Richard Smith, a street-sweeper, enjoyed life in NYC with his wife until their deformed, life-supported child is medically terminated at birth by the government, pulling Richard's soul into darkness. When he receives a distressing message from a group known as Right-To-Life, Richard sinks lower. His child and many others may be alive and living with the criminals below in old New York. He needs to find his son and there is only one way possible to confirm if it's true. What he finds may be more than what society above can fathom. A tense, wild ride of a sci-fi dystopian novel from the author of the Blunt Force Kharma series.… (mehr)
Kürzlich hinzugefügt vonkocienda, raulpresa, reading_fox, EarlyReviewers
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Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
"(R)Evolution" by M.E. Purfield is an action-packed book that's easy to get into. It tells the story of a world where things aren't what they seem and where a group of unlikely heroes must fight against powerful forces.

The story kicks off with a bang as we're introduced to the main characters and the world they live in. There's plenty of excitement right from the start, and it keeps you turning the pages to see what happens next.

Purfield does a great job of creating characters that feel real and relatable. Each character has their own unique personality and backstory, which adds depth to the story.

The pacing of the book is fast, with lots of twists and turns to keep you on the edge of your seat. However, there are moments when the plot feels a bit rushed, and you wish there was more time to explore certain aspects of the story.

Overall, "(R)Evolution" is a thrilling read that will appeal to anyone who enjoys action and adventure. Purfield has created an exciting world filled with intrigue and danger, and it's a ride you won't want to miss. ( )
  kocienda | Mar 15, 2024 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Captivating from the beginning, with a fast pace and interesting twists, it presents a world adapted to disaster that has transformed not only the way humanity lives but has rescued its values in some unexpected way. Simple, easy-to-read style

  raulpresa | Sep 21, 2022 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Interesting concept but utterly failing in execution, suffering from all the failings of a self-published book. If the author had bothered to employ a decent editor then a lot of the plot could have been saved with a bit of tightening up it might even have been quite good.

The setting is a post climate change dystopia - the antartic ice sheets have melted dumping 10s of m of seawater rise. Apparently in some places people have retreated further inland/uphill, but NewYork built walls to keep the water out (it's not clear if this is completely surrounding the city areas, or whether there is a mainland connection somewhere). This monumental engineering feat was only a prelude as they also built towers and hoisted whole districts up above the water. I'm not sure the author really has an understanding of the timescales involved, but it possibly doesn't matter.

The story focuses (mostly there's a few cutaways to random other characters who don't get any details) on a binman living on top of the towers (small kudos to the author here for realising even in utopia the streets still need cleaning by somebody). It's not clear where the they live as such, as the towers are reserved for the elite, and only criminals are dispatched to whatever life they can manage in the abandoned ground level, still protected by the decaying walls. The relentless polution that caused the ice sheet melting has had another effect. Many (most) babies are now born deformed, often to the same weird shape. These too the city disposes of, down the lower levels. The book then follows the obvious shape - our street cleaner has a deformed baby, his wife dies and he decides to connect to his son by descending the low levels. Where he's utterly unprepared to meet the society he should have expected, but also unprepared to find the society he does meet.

There's several world-building faults, but it all pails into insignificance compared to the error-strewn writing. Most pages have at least one basic error in grammar or typing. Usually missing words or badly formed sentences, the kind of things a pass through a spell-checker would miss, but any decent human reader immediately stumbles upon finding. Any shine that there is, becomes lost in this frequent halts to work out what might have been meant. Avoid. ( )
  reading_fox | Jul 15, 2022 |
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They tried to kill the ugliness but they only made it stronger. The icecaps melted and the water consumed the shorelines but New York City still stands. All four boroughs prosper thousands of feet over the old metropolis hastily protected by walls. Proper citizens live above in a beautiful, protective dome on concrete stilts and criminals serve life below in the polluted, walled ghost of a city. Richard Smith, a street-sweeper, enjoyed life in NYC with his wife until their deformed, life-supported child is medically terminated at birth by the government, pulling Richard's soul into darkness. When he receives a distressing message from a group known as Right-To-Life, Richard sinks lower. His child and many others may be alive and living with the criminals below in old New York. He needs to find his son and there is only one way possible to confirm if it's true. What he finds may be more than what society above can fathom. A tense, wild ride of a sci-fi dystopian novel from the author of the Blunt Force Kharma series.

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LibraryThing Early Reviewers-Autor

M.E. Purfields Buch (R)Evolution wurde im Frührezensenten-Programm LibraryThing Early Reviewers angeboten.

LibraryThing-Autor

M.E. Purfield ist ein LibraryThing-Autor, ein Autor, der seine persönliche Bibliothek in LibraryThing auflistet.

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