I have some blatant self-promotion for you. My father sparked my interest in science fiction. The first movie I saw in the theater was Forbidden Planet. Over time we watched The Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits on TV, and The Andromeda Strain and Close Encounters of the Third Kind in the theaters. This interest led me to write a sci-fi novel:
Galloper’s Quests, based on Gulliver’s Travels, begins in 2079. Navy Captain Samuel Galloper is a scientist who continually seeks answers about the mysteries of the universe. The military only temporarily quieted his feverish mind through its regimented ways. Galloper invents a propulsion system that transforms matter into energy and can open wormholes. However, the military wants to steal his work and use it to wage war. So, Galloper decides to prevent the perversion of his invention by leaving Earth on a journey through the cosmos. He visits three planets whose inhabitants exhibit very different ways of dealing with life. He becomes involved in the armed conflict between two of the planets. Along the way he befriends aliens and a witty robot. He falls in love with an extraterrestrial who might know more about humanity than Galloper does. As Galloper nears the end of his quests, he must weigh the risks of returning to Earth. Will his invention fall into the wrong hands? Will anyone believe his story about his intergalactic travels? What fate awaits his new love if she goes with him?
https://www.amazon.com/Gallopers-Quests-Fall-Earth-Destiny/dp/B0DRTBVDM6/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_
Galloper’s Quests is an ambitious sci-fi
adventure that follows Captain Samuel Galloper, a military scientist who dares
to defy his superiors in the pursuit of knowledge and freedom. Using his
groundbreaking propulsion system, he escapes Earth’s grasp and journeys across
the cosmos, encountering strange worlds, authoritarian societies, and
existential dilemmas. His story, smuggled to the reader under mysterious
circumstances, reads like a personal journal, a mix of raw emotion,
philosophical musings, and gripping narrative. From the military’s relentless
pursuit of power to the mind-numbing routines of an alien civilization, the
novel explores what it means to think freely in a world determined to control
you.
Galloper’s inner conflict is as compelling as the dangers he
faces. He’s a man torn between duty and conscience, trapped between the
structured obedience of military life and the terrifying unknown of free
thought. His encounters with Admiral Rutlaw, a hardened military leader
obsessed with weaponizing his discoveries, highlight this tension brilliantly.
Rutlaw’s interrogation is chilling because it reveals the military’s
single-minded goal: control and dominance. Galloper, however, isn’t willing to
be a cog in that machine. His escape isn’t just physical; it’s a moral stand,
and that’s what makes his journey so captivating.
Then there’s the planet Burc, a place that at first seems
promising but quickly reveals itself as another kind of prison. The Burcs live
in a rigid, cyclical society where work is endless, thinking is discouraged,
and individuality is stifled. Their robotic sentries enforce order, while their
Procs, like the conflicted Lask, bear the mental burden of decision-making so
others don’t have to. It’s a fascinating concept, one that feels eerily
familiar. When Galloper’s carefully constructed picnic table is destroyed by a
robot, it’s a perfect metaphor for the futility of creativity in a society that
fears change. Burc’s motto, “More work, less thought,” echoes throughout the
book, a warning about the dangers of blind obedience.
But Galloper’s Quests isn’t all grim.
There’s an undeniable thrill in its interstellar exploration, and Cileone has a
knack for making space travel feel both wondrous and dangerous. The HOPS
propulsion system, with its ability to fold space and create wormholes, is fascinating,
yet terrifying in its unpredictability. The descriptions of travel bodies
stretching, consciousness flickering, reality bending are some of the novel’s
most immersive moments. When Galloper arrives on a new world, the awe is
palpable, reminding us why we dream of the stars in the first place.
Galloper’s Quests is perfect for fans of
thought-provoking sci-fi, especially those who enjoy books that question
authority, challenge societal norms, and explore the weight of human choices.
If you like stories that mix The Forever War’s military critique
with 1984’s oppressive regimes and Star Trek’s
exploratory wonder, you’ll find a lot to love here. It’s not a light read, it
makes you think, it makes you uncomfortable, and at times, it makes you angry.
But that’s the point. It’s a journey worth taking, even if the destination
isn’t what you expect. – Literary Titan
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