The Liminal Zone

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Some review comments

  • Breakfast with Pandora: “…Abbott uses his deep understanding of human nature to
    explore what would happen in a future where outer space is much
    less about what’s ‘out there’ than what’s inside us…”

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Available in Kindle on Amazon.co.uk, Amazon.comAmazon.in, and other global Amazon stores – search by name. Paperback version available on Amazon.co.uk, Amazon.com or Amazon.in. The Book Depository offer free world-wide delivery in paperback form as another option.

Timing, the sequel to Far from the Spaceports is a near-future science fiction novel. Mitnash Thakur and his virtual partner Slate, tackle hi-tech financial crime in deep space.

Samples (free downloads):
The Liminal Zone – Sample – Kindle mobi
The Liminal Zone – Sample – epub

The Liminal Zone cover
The Liminal Zone cover

Selkies in Space?

Nina Buraca, investigator of possible signs of alien life, has heard tales of
mysterious events on Pluto’s moon Charon, where a science outpost studies extrasolar planets. Facing opposition from her colleagues, she nevertheless travels from Earth to uncover the truth. Once there, she finds herself working with a team of people who have many secrets. To make progress, she has to take sides in an old dispute that she knows nothing about.

Can she determine who – or what – is really behind the name “selkies“, that the station’s staff have given to this uncanny phenomenon? And how will the discovery change her life?

The Liminal Zone, a novel in the Far from the Spaceports series, takes you a further twenty years into the future – and out to the edge of our solar system – for an encounter with the unknown.

Publisher: Matteh Publications (October 14th 2016)
ISBN: 978-1838-0120-0-7 (soft cover)
ISBN: 978-1838-0120-1-4 (ebook – kindle)

See http://www.kephrath.com for more options.

Cover image © copyright by permission Ian Grainger www.iangrainger.co.uk.

Original Matteh Publications logo drawn by Jackie Morgan.

Planet and asteroid surface surface textures on the book cover and promotional material make use of images made available in the public domain by NASA, and are hereby acknowledged. NASA does not endorse the content of this book. At the time of publication, the specific images used may be found at:

  • http://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2016/new-hubble-portrait-of-mars,
  • http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA10367 and
  • http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA20825.

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Writing, both historical and speculative