Gregg Rosenblum

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Gregg Rosenblum

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Member Since
December 2012


Gregg Rosenblum works at Harvard, where he wages epic battles against technology as an editor/webmaster/communications/quasi-IT guy. He graduated from UC San Diego and has an MFA in creative writing from Emerson College. He lives in Boston with his wife and daughter.

Average rating: 3.58 · 2,888 ratings · 472 reviews · 4 distinct worksSimilar authors
Revolution 19 (Revolution 1...

3.44 avg rating — 2,054 ratings — published 2013 — 6 editions
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Fugitive X (Revolution 19, #2)

3.88 avg rating — 543 ratings — published 2014 — 10 editions
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City 1 (Revolution 19, #3)

3.93 avg rating — 291 ratings — published 2015 — 5 editions
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Revolution 19[REVOLUTION 19...

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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

Sample of CITY 1

Hey folks, want to sample the beginning of CITY 1? Take a look: shrd.by/jV95aQ
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Published on January 07, 2015 12:37 Tags: city-1, revolution-19
Revolution 19 Fugitive X City 1
(3 books)
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3.58 avg rating — 2,888 ratings

Quotes by Gregg Rosenblum  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Right, what's there possibly to worry about?" she said. "Just some surgery in the garage with a drunk doctor."

Little miss," said Doc, pointing a finger at Cass. "I'm drinking. I'm not drunk. There's a difference." He took another sip from his cup. "But in another ten minutes or so, that might change, so you should stop stalling.”
Gregg Rosenblum, Revolution 19

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This group is for Young and New Adult readers. For those who believe in Angels, Vampires, Werewolves, Fairies and other mythical and supernatural crea ...more
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message 1: by Sarah

Sarah Bronte Connor IN A DAY LIKE TODAY!.........

At first we called it system-wide malfunctions when the robots stopped fighting at exactly 2:15 P.M. Greenwich mean time, August 17, 2051. They had been designed by humans to fight our wars, but for twenty-two hours the battlefields were silent. We called it a blessing and the beginning of a new peace. Then when the robots began killing again, now targeting their human commanders, we shook our heads and called it fatal programming errors. When, a day later, the skies over cities on six continents grew dark with warships, we began to understand. And when the bombs rained down and then legions of bot footsoldiers marched into the burning ruins, killing any humans who resisted and dragged away the rest of us, we finally called it what it was: revolution.


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