Story of the author’s twenty year abduction as a slave laborer in a German breakaway civilization’s colony Ceres out in space. His story is harrowing to say the least. Already subjected to slave labor via abducted consciousness, he finds himself surrounded by further iniquities of all kinds, including murder, rape, and psychological torture. Morality is treated with contempt, and sociopathy, condescension and general mean-spiritedness abound in the experience of a slave. God is seemingly absent, and the author is even mocked on at least one occasion after invoking the idea. Ceres itself is populated with extraterrestrials of many species. None treat the author well, detesting him as a slave of which he is clearly marked. The extraterrestrial beings encountered on the colony are humanoid in form, familiar types including reptilians and greys (the latter described as robotic), although there are other types such as “fish” looking humanoids mentioned as well.
More interesting are the allusions to the extra-advanced beings and higher levels of operation out in the universe. As with human groups on earth, inequality is the law among extraterrestrial groups in space. Areas of the universe are forbidden from visitation by Ceres, with an area at one point described as technologically cordoned off by some extraterrestrial authority. Time travel technology is utilized in Ceres under strict standards, with abuse leading to unimaginable punishment by time authorities (a specific Rick and Morty episode comes to mind here), described in one case as a thousand year stint on a different temporal plane, from which the person who returned was, predictably, never the same. Other more advanced entities elsewhere are described as peaceful, such as groups in the Pleiades star system. An encounter with one - “her” - toward the end of the book is of the more enthralling throughout. The author describes seeing what in the colony is termed an “ultra-human” - a female dark-blue fourteen-foot tall sixth-density (extra advanced) being. The author is enrapt with her beauty and “honored” by her slightest acknowledgment before being reprimanded for his attempt to interact with her telepathically.
All in all a fascinating journey that I hope in the end is fiction. The severe lack of morality is jarring and stays with you. If such an experience is the spacefaring future in store for humanity - more of the same historically despicable behavior albeit amplified by drastically increased technological ability à la Black Mirror - then perhaps extinction is more appealing.