Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Francis Sandow

This series follows the last human born in the 20th century, awakening into a distant and transformed future. After centuries of space travel and suspended animation, he becomes a telepath and a "worldscaper," capable of terraforming entire planets. Guided by a dying alien race, he searches for purpose and connection in a vastly changed universe. It's an epic tale of adaptation, loss, and rebirth on a cosmic scale.

To Die in Italbar
Isle of the Dead

Recommended Reading Order

  1. 1

    Isle of the Dead

    • 192 pages
    • 7 hours of reading
    3.8(35)Add rating

    Sandow: planet owner, planet maker; a man of immense wealth and power in human terms. To the alien Pei'ans he was more- a God, his personality merged with the ancient consciousness of Shimbo, Thunderbringer. And the Pei'ans were the oldest and wisest race of the universe. Sandow might be sceptical of his Godly powers but he could not deny the evidence of their existence. Then the new tri-dee picture of Kathy arrived. Kathy who had died long ago. Six times this had happened. Tri-dees of of six people, all dead, all people who had meant much to Sandow. Soon he discovered that their Recall Tapes had been stolen from Earth. Somewhere he had an enemy who was recreating the people of his past. An artificial rebirth into a contrived suffering so hat Sandow in turn would suffer. Now he would have to fight as a God; use the powers that rationality rejected, for his enemy was also a God.

    Isle of the Dead
  2. 2

    To Die in Italbar

    • 316 pages
    • 12 hours of reading
    3.7(56)Add rating

    In a galaxy plagued by a mysterious and deadly disease, a unique individual known as "Mr. H" possesses the power to heal or kill with a mere touch. As various factions pursue him for their own motives, the quest to find Mr. H intensifies. Francis Sandow emerges as a key figure, potentially holding the secret to H's true identity. The story unfolds against a backdrop of chaos, exploring themes of power, identity, and the desperate search for salvation.

    To Die in Italbar