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Elsewhen

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True romantics and science geeks, the love story you have been waiting for!


A scientist makes two stunning First, his lost soul mate is alive in an alternate universe, and second, the Earth is doomed.

Science prodigies Lije (Elijah) Grant and Laura Bess Austin have been soul mates since they were kids. But as Laura Bess is flying off to college, the plane goes down and all aboard are lost. Lije is devastated; the love of his life is gone.

Lije grows up to become an astrophysicist, living a minimal existence, tracking boring space junk, night after tedious night at a radar station. Then one evening, he notices a satellite suddenly veering off course, disappearing into deep space.

Investigating, he discovers that it is the work of a small black hole, and it is coming closer. The Earth has maybe two weeks before Armageddon.


And that's when Laura Bess walks up to Lije in a coffee shop and says "Hello, stranger."


The future just isn't what it used to be;  neither is the past.

118 pages, Paperback

First published May 29, 2012

19 people want to read

About the author

Gary Bullock

2 books26 followers
Originally from eastern Tennessee, Gary Bullock is an actor and writer. In past lives, he has been a software engineer, radar operator, Hollywood apartment manager, and DJ. One of his passions is building and flying model airplanes. He lives in western North Carolina with his soul mate, Mil Nicholson.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Brett.
86 reviews3 followers
April 12, 2015
Elsewhen is a story about star-crossed young lovers, a love story for science fiction fans. Conceived when author Gary Bullock was working at a radio astronomy site, Elsewhen follows the path of Elijah (‘Lije’) and Laura Bess, two child prodigies who fall head-over-heels in love before tragedy strikes and tears them apart. But for Lije and Laura, it seems that True Love might be able to thwart even fate…

Concepts from the more poetic end of theoretical physics are liberally peppered among the pages—musings on the directionality of time, for example—but this is by no means ‘hard’ science fiction. Scientific complexity level is about equivalent to the first Thor movie, so if you don’t know your bosons from your fermions, don’t despair.

Blending physics with a love story might seem like a difficult line to walk, but Bullock does a respectable job with his 118-page novella. Bullock’s career appears to have wended from screen writing to writing novels, and indeed, Elsewhen reads kind of like a screenplay—which I mean as both praise and as a critique.

On the side of praise, there is a good kind of inertia to the book. The plotline barrels along at a cracking pace, and given the length of the novella, it’s quite possible that you might read this cover to cover in a single night. But on the flip side, I wanted this novel to be longer. Several concepts and (particularly) characters were only loosely sketched out before the plotline whisked away to the next development.

The brevity led to my two main problems with the book. First of all, some key characters are bald rehashes of literary tropes. Some character development earlier in the novel could have, for example, fleshed out the villains in the story to make them more human and relatable.

Second, I craved more depth from the story. The many fantastical elements of the storyline open up the main characters in discussion of various concepts of philosophy and metaphysics, and I felt that more exposition here would have led to a more interesting read (and probably would have also helped with the character development problem). However, this may be less a critique of Elsewhen, and more a problem of my expectations going into this novel.

These issues aside, Elsewhen is a fun book with a clever premise. For the price of a cup of coffee, it’s easy enough to recommend for a light read.

Full disclosure: reviewed for Universe Today
7 reviews
July 12, 2015
This review can also be found at exzorders.com/reviews/elsewhen-gary-b...

A very 'romantic' tale of romance-cum-science fiction containing none of the filth and fluff that the modern day sci-fi books usually have. There is hardly much in terms of 'sexual content' and whatever I found here was rather tame by my standards. The book deals with the age-old theme of 'separation and reunion' of two sweethearts, Elijah and Laura; only here, the reunion comes with a strange twist. The main story and the emotional responses of the characters are quite realistic if you take the sci-fi elements out if them, although some of the dialogs could have been a little tauter. Like the author, I too believe in the concept of soul mates and that there is someone right out there somewhere, waiting for each one of us!

As a science fiction novella, the way this book tackles the alternate realities is unique. Highly recommend for anyone who is either into science fiction or romance genres; this is one book which is guaranteed to satisfy both groups! I hope there is a sequel to it coming up some day; I would wanna read that one too!

To read more of my reviews visit http://exzorders.com/reviews/
Profile Image for Jan.
593 reviews11 followers
January 12, 2015
Listening to this now and loving it!
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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