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Chronopticus Chronicles #3

Chronopticus Rising

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Pierce Steadman returns home expecting a hero's welcome, but instead finds himself out of a job and witnessing a Martian colony on the brink of collapse. Soon after, citizens are sorted by a futuristic Network tracking algorithm and the religious undesirables are rounded up. Yet will the crackdown bring the settlements one step closer to Eden? Can the Network really predict the future? And why is a former smuggler walking the streets at night talking to streetlights?

Kindle Edition

First published December 9, 2014

282 people want to read

About the author

Michael Galloway

25 books63 followers
I am an outdoors enthusiast whose interests include camping, fishing, hiking, writing and technology. I have a B.A. in Journalism, and have also been writing software in one language or another for over twenty years.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Dixie Conley.
Author 1 book9 followers
January 7, 2015
This story is about a Mars colony where the current guy in charge is against religion. He devises a system to deal with those who are religious (or are against him) using the Roman Coliseum as an inspiration for their punishment. He's thwarted by the former leader and his wife, both Christians.

Plot-wise, this book is a little thin. While the villain has awesome cosmic power, so to speak, he's all too easily taken out. Also, he's entirely against God, but persecutes only Christians. While it's plausible that the hero is a Christian, as the villain is against God, he should be against all forms of religion, not just Christianity.

The characters are wooden and one dimensional. I never managed to care for anyone. While I liked the child-genius, it occurs to me now that the genius child who can do everything the adults can't is a cliche. In fact, one of his inventions just happens to fall into the hands of the guy in the prison cell next to our hero and our hero just happens to recognize it and is able to use it to make a prison break.

All of that being said, the tale of a society where first people are categorized, then the worst are taken, then the next worse are taken, and then the moderates are taken is a morality play worth revisiting now and then. If only so we don't let it happen in our time.

I received an electronic copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
169 reviews6 followers
January 3, 2015
I read all 3 volumes. Slow moving, I never really got into the book and began caring what happens next.
Profile Image for Darren.
2,048 reviews49 followers
March 2, 2015
The third book in this series. The previous two books of this series are on my read list two. It is a good book if you like science fiction. I enjoyed it for sure. It was a well written book.
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