Steven Kinder Is Having A Really Bad Day… Steven Kinder's life seems to be one bad day after another. His apartment burns down…one day after moving in. A job is lost due to a computer glitch. College records are mysteriously frozen and he’s accused of cheating his way through his degree. When paramilitary thugs bust down his door at two in the morning, suddenly he’s having the worst bad day ever. Hauled away in chains, he’s accused of being an illegal alien and thrown into a subzero coffin to linger in suspended animation forever. But life turns from bad to bizarre when his rescue becomes even more bewildering than the kidnapping. Steven is about to discover that there are aliens everywhere—real intergalactic aliens hidden just out of human perception. And that the accidents destroying Steven’s life may not have been so accidental after all... Now he’s on the run and really learning what being human is all about. Because the only thing more traumatic than learning alien souls are reincarnating on Earth would be learning he's one of them.
The Last Reincarnation of Steven Kinder is an enjoyable science fiction read for mature audiences. I enjoyed the thought-provoking philosophies put forth with the underlying lattice of science. The science is presented with enough information to provide a reader the ability to follow the story.
There are a couple of items in the presentation of the story I felt could have been done better. This first has already been mentioned with the amount of background information presented at the start of the book how that information is presented in a give-and-take between two characters. I feel that could have been done more within the story. The other aspect was the presentation of some of the foreshadowing. Kinder tells a part of the story and then comes back with a statement something like, I’ll talk more about that later. For me this was heavy-handed foreshadowing.
The excitement and suspense of The Last Reincarnation of Steven Kinder grows in the later sections of the book. The story gives a solid beginning to end telling with enough hooks to lead me into the next book of the series.
I recommend The Last Reincarnation of Steven Kinder for mature who like theoretical science.
I'm so happy I found this new author and gave him a chance. It is kind of fun meeting and trying out new authors right? I found it hard to put this down especially in the last half!
There are a couple "typos" but it is otherwise a clean printing. The story is good, a bit different twist on the alien theme. I didn't always follow the science very well but there was enough action to cover that. It might even be a good reread because of it. There is A LOT of science too btw
I bought all of Mr. Finnigan's books signed at a fair in Idaho Falls. ( It was a worthwhile purchase) So, I have the second in the series right here ready for reading time tonight. Can't wait
I received this sci-fi book from a giveaway. I am new to my kindle, so had trouble finding the title! Once found, I had trouble with the format. I needed a larger font size which in made in difficult to read full paragraphs. Every time I closed, it did not saved where I left off. Irritating. But that was the physical formating, not anything to do with this incredible mind warping book. Disclaimer: I am not science minded, so do not tend to read science fiction. This book is an engineer's and a physicists dream with concepts of 4th dimensions, multiple planes and computer programming. As the book blurb says, John Kinder is a victim of lifelong, major why me scenarios. He soon learns there are aliens among us. Aliens who have been with humans for a millennia. He is told there is a reason Stupid Things Happen to him. This newly discovered universe on Earth are full of literally a rainbow colored aliens that may or not be good for us. There is graphic violence, mild swearing but no sexual situations.