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Julian Solo by Shelly Reuben

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Having experienced the impossible transition from death to life, Julian Solo, a passionate scientist with a lust for knowledge, seeks to recreate the death defying circumstances again and again for the sake of the woman he loves

Paperback

First published April 1, 1988

14 people want to read

About the author

Shelly Reuben

15 books18 followers
Shelly Reuben's first novel, Julian Solo, was nominated by the Mystery Writers of America for an Edgar Award and by the Libertarian Futurist Society for a Prometheus. Her crime novel, Origin and Cause, was nominated by the Maltese Falcon Society of Japan for a Falcon; and her adult fable, The Man with the Glass Heart, was a Freedom Book Club selection. Her fiction has been published by Scribner, Harper, Harcourt, and is also available through Blackstone Audio Books.

Her new book, Dabbling in Crime, November 2016, is a collection of short fiction originally published in The Forensic Examiner and The Evening Sun.

Shelly Reuben is a licensed private detective, and the years that she spend investigating fire and arson inspired many of her stories and books.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
9 reviews
May 28, 2023
Was hard to comprehend at first but once I got into it and understood what was going on, I enjoyed it. This talented woman writes columns for our local newspaper!
10 reviews
December 3, 2012
Julian Solo unfolds through a series of letters, diary entries, memorandum, and the like. The story is about Julian Solo, a brilliant scientist and a man in love. The main narrator (through journal entries) is Solo’s stepson, Mathew Wylie, who tells his tale (when we meet him, he has been arrested for murder) with youthful passion and romantic turns of phrase. This is a love story, a science-fiction tale, suspense novel, and a plunge into a word filled with larger-than-life people in intriguing locals (Roosevelt Island; The Steinway Piano Showroom; A Hans and Gretel House overlooking the New York Harbor). If you like epistolary novels, you will love this book. Highly recommended.
14 reviews1 follower
December 17, 2012
If you are looking for an old-fashioned Gothic suspense novel with a dash of science fiction (people can’t really die and come back to life again, can they?) this is the book for you. The language is elegant. The moral question of the limits of science is tantalizing, and you won’t be able to read it without casting it in your mind as a movie. The book races from the first to the last page. I loved it!
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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