For a special pair of android sisters, Nyx and Dayna, it’s a sure bet they dream. But when Nyx, the red-eyed sister, finds herself expired, is she dreaming, experiencing a post death virus or perhaps something greater? Further blurring the lines, Dayna, the violet-eyed sister, finds herself paired hybrid style with the consciousness of a deceased financial baroness. Can these androids die and experience an afterlife? If so, what implications does it have for humans who experience the same out of body experiences? Is the afterlife limited to biological beings, or perhaps, as Simulation Theory suggests, are we are all binary codes playing out in pixelated formation? The Android Sisters, Changing Faces, explores death, the universe and just how an artificial being might classify itself as human by loose definition.
Novelist turned science fiction writer currently working on 17th novel. Caitlin Diggs series includes Blood Web, Extreme Liquidation, Demon Inhibitions and 9 Incarnate. New series Diggs & Shay to publish in 2017.
Crime/mystery novels Kindred Killers and Murder by Association to be followed up with The Killing Collective in 2017.
Look for science fiction series Camden Investigations to continue with Time Wanderer, a follow up to 2015's Coalescence.
This story is really filling out with more information and intensity as it proceeds. The Red eyed sister Bix is trying to understand and figure out what is happening and how it came to be. Narrator did a nice job both on book 1&2 in this Series. Watch out the government is now wanting (without anyone aware) to get involved with Androids for spying.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Starta pens a sharp and wonderful story in this second book, The Android Sisters: Changing Faces. Again, the reader meets the Android sisters, Nyx and Dayna. It's an interesting perspective of life and death through the interesting eyes of these sisters. The characters are definitely well-developed, and are almost human. I like how Starta gave them human qualities, but always reminds the reader that they're androids. A thrilling story that keeps the reader engaged. A real-page turner. I look forward to reading more by this author. This book is definitely recommended by Amy's Bookshelf Reviews.