Miira (Innerscape #1) by A.C. Flory

What Amazon says
In 2101, the average life expectancy is one hundred and ten. Miira Tahn, last Lady of Dhurai, is dying at just fifty-two. Faced with a slow, agonizing death, her only hope is Innerscape, a virtual paradise in which the Residents inhabit beautiful, digital bodies indistinguishable from the real thing.
Or so the brochures say. But even Eden had a snake, and once inducted, the Residents of Innerscape can never again return to the real world. If anything goes wrong, they’ll be lost in the dark forever.
Yet for Miira Tahn, even a tenuous hope is better than the fate that awaits her.
‘…sometimes you just have to close your eyes and jump…’
‘Miira’ is the first book of the Innerscape cyle and corresponds to Episode 1 of the original series.
My review
This is an extraordinary book. I have had it on my TBR for a few years, but I am not a big sci fi fan so I put off reading it. Now, I regret waiting as this really is a most intriguing and clever book. I already have the next book in the series and will be reading it in the near future.
Miira is a woman, a refugee, whose life has been reduced to that of a middled aged invalid reliant on a manufactured exoskeleton to help her do everything. All her status and money cannot reverse the damage done to her physical body during her early years as a new refugee in Australia. Faced with a slow and painful death, Miira choses to enter Innerscape, a virtual world for wealthy individuals whose physical bodies can no longer offer them a good life. Despite some anxieties, Miira decides to go ahead and undergo the transition of her body to enter Innerscape. Once transitioned there is no returning to your previous life.
Miira is an excellent character. Highly intelligent and yet vulnerable, the author’s sensitive writing brings Miira to life and I really wanted Innerscape to meet her expectations and make up for everything she’d lost over her relatively short life of 52 years. As in the real world of ordinary humans, nothing is every straight forward. Innerscape is run by people who are subject to many character flaws and these extend into the virtual world they helped to create and run. Miira is a strong and determined woman, one who sets a good example to all female readers, and although this book ended after her integration into Innerscape, the reader knows there is a lot more to come and believes that Miira will overcome whatever is thrown at her in this strange new virtual world because she is a survivor. As a side note, I really liked that Miira chose to return to a younger version of herself when she entered Innerscape and didn’t turn herself into an artificially enhanced ‘Barbie doll’.
One of the reasons I don’t read a lot of sci fi is because I don’t like pages of explanations about future worlds or, alternatively, no explanations at all so I don’t really understand the future world. The author managed to keep the reader completely informed about her created world by showing and through dialogue which made this book a really good experience for me. I could understand exactly how both the future world and the virtual world of Innerscape worked from the behaviours, actions, and conversations that took place.
I highly recommend this book and I am looking forward to reading the the other books in this series.
Purchase Miira (Innerscape book 1) by A.C. Flory from Amazon US here: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B076GYZBKQ
You can find other books by A.C. Flory on Amazon US here: https://www.amazon.com/stores/acflory/author/B00B1M04JI
Happy Hour and Other Sorrows by JT Twissel

What Amazon says
October 11, 1970
Dear C.
Here I am in PARIS FRANCE! Wow. I’m staying with my uncle’s boss, a gay guy who was some kind of a big wig during WWII which is all they ever talk about here.The war, the war, the war! That trip I told you about to Milan to retrieve a vintage car . . . well it didn’t go so well. The owner DIED on the way home and the Swiss police thought he was MURDERED and so they tried to make me stay but it was too freaky so I split .
Oh, and remember that cute guy GIL? He keeps popping up but I don’t think he really likes me. I think they just want him to keep an eye on me because I supposedly have the KNACK FOR TROUBLE and might poop in a bidet or really kill a burgermeister. Sheesh.
You wouldn’t like it here because they eat BUNNIES and SNAILS and all kinds of gross things. I guess they had to during that damn war. I should be home by Christmas unless another trip goes awry and I end up missing my flight home, AGAIN! And boy, will I have a lot of stories to tell.
Love, Riley
My review
This was a fun romp around Germany, a bit of France and a few other European places through the eyes of a young American college student named Riley. Riley’s Uncle Bob, whom everyone assumes is a spy for the American government, lives in post-WW2 Germany. In an unusual gesture of generosity, he offers to host Riley for a few weeks for a European vacation. Riley’s not that keen as she has her college studies and a boyfriend but her mother is very determined for her to take this unexpected opportunity. And so she does.
The opportunity turns out to take the shape of acting as a driver for her uncle who has been banned from driving by the German authorities. He also turns out not to be a spy but an accountant for the American Government which isn’t quite the same thing. That is what he says, in any event. Regardless, Riley does seize the opportunity and sets out to meet ‘real’ Germans and do things that ‘real’ Germans do. Her uncle, the non-spy, also involves her with various work colleagues who take her on what are planned to be short travel adventures and end up being unexpected catastrophes.
Riley goes to Europe very much a typical American student with limited life experience and this all changes during her time in Germany which ends up being a lot longer than the planned few weeks. The book is a coming of age story and I loved following Riley’s escapades, some her own fault and some imposed on her. It was a most unusual and refreshing read for me.
Purchase Happy Hour and Other Sorrows by JT Twissel from Amazon US here: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0F28JXNRL
Find more of JT Twissels books on Amazon US here: https://www.amazon.com/stores/JT-Twissel/author/B00HZSOZ1K
They sound like engaging reads.
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HI Paul, thank you. They are both great reads and AC Flory is from your neck of the woods – Australian.
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Ah, good to know, I like supporting the locals 🙂
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Two excellent reviews of what sound like two excellent books, Robbie. When a sci-fi novel is good, it can be REALLY good!
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-grin- I think so too. Scifi is a strange beast. At its best it’s a Dune or a Left Hand of Darkness or a Stranger in a Strange Land. At its worst it’s…well, it’s not the kind of fiction I enjoy reading. As much as I love tech, it’s the interplay between tech and /people/ that makes me love scifi. 🙂
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Yes! To be really compelling, sci-fi needs to have a heart amid the tech, futurism, etc.
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Yes! And when it does it becomes something more. I’ve just finished re-reading Dune for the umpteenth time [9 I think but I stopped counting long ago]. Anyway, I discovered yet more that I’d missed in the previous reads. It’s just so rich. lol I’ll stop gushing now. Cheers. 🙂
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You’ve done an impressive amount of “Dune” re-readership, acflory! It’s a rare novel that can make that worthwhile. 🙂
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-blush- Just a wee bit obsessed. 😉
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💛
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💛
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😄, I have never read Dune but I have purchased the audio book.
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There are ‘fantasy’ elements in Dune, but what I love are the socio-political threads. And the environment! Herbert is possibly one of the first modern writers to make the environment of the planet a character in its own right. I really, really like that. 🙂
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🙏🧡🌈
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Hi Meeks, it is the human element of your stories that makes them so good.
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-hugs- Thank you! That means a lot.
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💓
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Hi DAve, you are right. Miira was very good for me. I’m delighted you enjoyed this reviews.
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Happy Hour sounds pretty fun, like what I would have done if I had the courage.
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Hi Jacqui, I would never have done this as I was so over protected as a girl and young woman. My travelling has all been done with hubby dearest.
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A fabulous review for Miira I read this series a few years ago now and loved them even though I am not a great sci fi fan I really liked these books…Two cracking reviews ,Robbie x
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Thank you, Carol. I love cracking. Other British reviewers also use that description. Miira is a character driven story in a fascinating AI fantasy setting.
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I don’t read science fiction either, but I’m sorely tempted by your review of Miira. I got such a big kick out of your Happy Hour review, specifically “I supposedly have the KNACK FOR TROUBLE and might poop in a bidet.” A classmate did just that on our French Club trip to Paris when we were in high school. Boy, was the chambermaid mad!
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lmao! Oops?!?
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Smile
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Hi Liz, that is so funny. Happy Hour amused me and was great escapism. Miira is fascinating and the main character is very compelling.
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🙂
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I read the entire Innerscape series some years ago and thought it was original and fascinating. Your review makes me want to revisit it now that AI is among us.
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Thanks, Audrey. Sadly the AI I envisaged in Innerscape is not the AI we currently have. But maybe getting the timing wrong means that we can still make AI work for us in the future.
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I hope you are right, Meeks.
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We’ll see, we’ll see.
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💞
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Hi Audrey, I think this series is worth revisiting. It is great story in a fascinating AI fantasy setting.
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It is indeed. There is some harrowing stuff in the next two books, as I recall.
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It seems that way from the blurbs
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It sounds interesting.
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Thank’s Brad
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They sound like interesting books, Robbie. I think the best sci-fi is not difficult to understand.
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Hi Merril, you are right. Overly complicated sci fi world building and details are a turn off for me. I like to understand what I read. Miira is a beautiful character driven story set in an intriguing AI fantasy world.
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Wonderful reviews of two very different books Robbie.
Happy Hour sounds a delight to read.
Thank you for sharing.
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HI Maggie, Happy Hour is relaxing escapism. Both books were great entertainment.
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Hi Robbie
Thank you again for sharing.
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💙
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These are wonderful, mindful reviews, Robbie. Congrats to AC and JT. I hear echoes of “Upload,” but AC’s sounds more exciting and more serious and with world building. I got a kick out of JT’s title and the cover. It sounds like a great read too. Hugs all around.
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Thanks, Teagan. I haven’t read ‘Upload’ but now you’ve sparked my interest so I might check it out. Thank you. 😀
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Hi Teagan, thanks for your comment. I don’t know Upload but Miira was fascinating and a most compelling read. Happy Hour was entertaining and fun.
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Two great reviews, Robbie. Happy Hour and Other Sorrows sounds like a Jack Lemmon movie. Hey … I bet it would make a good movie. Miira Innerscape sounds awesome!
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Thank you!
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Hi Priscilla, I don’t know Jack Lemmon but I enjoyed this fun book. Miira was also excellent. It really interested me even though I usually avoid sci fi.
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Love your brilliant reviews. I am not a Sci Fi fan, but the first one does sound interesting. A future, that could well be true in years to come, especially with AI increasing year on year.
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Hi Diana, Miira is a fascinating book which is character driven but set in an amazing AI fantasy setting.
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🙂❤️🙂
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Great re news, Robbie! You remind me I have Miira waiting for me in my Kindle too.
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Fingers crossed you like it. Innerscape is character driven scifi so it sits uncomfortably between normal fiction and the very popular military scifi that guys like. Thanks for commenting. 🙂
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That is exactly right, character driven sci fi.
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I have truly enjoyed this post of yours. Lovely review, lovely people, lovely conversations. -hugs-
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This is a lovely and engaged community 🌈🩵
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That it is. I’m not a particularly gregarious person in real life so it has amazed me how many good friends I’ve made here on WordPress. And yes, it is our community that’s made it possible.
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It is the same for me. Well, perhaps I am quite a social person but I am also an introvert and a deep thinker so I have struggled to find ‘my people’.
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Yes! I’ve read a lot of the younger ones talking about their ‘tribe’ and I’ve finally understood what they mean.
lol In my day we used to say our people were kindred spirits. 🙂
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Yes, like Anne from Anne of Green Gables.
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OMG!!!!! Yes. Exactly like Anne.
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Haha, yes
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HI Denise, Miira is excellent. Far better than I expected even after reading Meeks’ short story collection. I have book 2 already and I’m not one for series.
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Oh my goodness, Robbie! Innerscape appeals to me in a big way. Off to check it out. Thank you for sharing!
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Thanks, Jan. I hope you like Miira. 🙂
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My pleasure, Jan. I’m delighted you enjoyed these reviews.
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Definitely going to check this one out. Thank you.
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Thanks for commenting. 🙂
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These are both great reads in their different ways.
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Thanks so much for both reading and reviewing my book. Really appreciate it!
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-grin- I have to tell you that I intend to read your book too! I spent a year travelling around parts of Europe back when the dinosaurs were young, and I want to revisit some of the fun I had. Thankfully I don’t think anyone in my student hostel messed up in a bidet but I /can/ imagine it happening. lol
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It certainly was different – no cell phones, no google maps, no email!! I started reading M and it’s so addictive – I can’t wait to read the rest – I am a huge Sci-fi fan! I found your writing similar to LeGuin. Emotionally charged sci-fi with an emphasis on the natural world.
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💚
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Oh my god…LeGuin is my absolute hero! I cannot tell you how…damn, I’m almost in tears. Thank you!!!!!!
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🩵
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It’s my pleasure, Jan. I really enjoyed your book.
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Insightful reviews, as always. (K)
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Thanks for commenting. Cheers from Australia. 😀
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Thank you, Kerfe. I really enjoy finding interesting and unique books.
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I am such a slow reader I will never even get to all the books I own, but I enjoy reading reviews.
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I’m surprised you are a slow reader. I am a fast reader. I listen to audio books to slow me down – smile!
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I used to read a lot, but since Covid, hardly at all. It’s a strange thing. I do read a lot of poetry now though.
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Two great reviews, Robbie. I also do not lean towards science fiction, but I am often happily surprised to find great stories and writing. Happy Hour and Other Sorrows does sound refreshing and a nice balance against Miira. Thanks for sharing your reviews 🙂
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Hi Barbara, Innerscapes is more of a story about the human condition than a sci fi although it is set in a sci fi world of fantasy. I enjoyed both books very much.
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Hi Robbie! Thank you so much for this fabulous review. Miira and I send you huge hugs. 🙂
Oh and thank you for the Happy Hour review as well. I have very fond memories of France and Germany so the book is just about to migrate to my Kindle. Cheers!
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Hi Meeks, I am very happy you liked this review. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and already have book 2 waiting for me. Happy Hour is lots of fun. I enjoyed travelling around Germany and France through the eyes of a young woman.
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I have maybe a day or two before I can start reading but I’m looking forward to it too. Part nostalgia I admit, but your review did make me smile too. 🙂
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looks great!
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🧡
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Robbie, thank you for another thoughtful review and introduction to A.C. Flory’s book. I always appreciate how you highlight stories that reveal both imagination and depth. Books like these remind us how belonging and love are intertwined; when we connect with an author’s world, we also rediscover something within ourselves. That sense of connection is what keeps me reading.
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Hi Rebecca, I’m delighted I could introduce you to Andrea. I never cease to be amazed by the originality and uniqueness of ideas in this community. So much more so than in the traditionally published book world where these characteristics have disappeared recently. The industry has become to corporate and money orientated for literature as and art form to thrive.
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I’m glad you posted these great reviews, Robbie. They sound captivating to me.
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I enjoyed both. They are very different but both interesting and unique.
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I read Innerscape, all the series, one after the other. It’s a fascinating world acflory has created, with interesting and complex characters. Definitely a series I’d recommend.
Happy Hour sounds like it’s well worth a read, too.
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HI Viv, Andrea is a very good writer and her Innerscape world is engrossing and fascinating. Thanks for adding your boost for this series.
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Thanks for the reviews, Robbie! Both books sound excellent.
I understand how a book can sit in a TBR pile for years, there are so many to read. This is why I only allow 4 in my TBR pile at a time. When one is read and off the pile, another can take its place. Otherwise, I would be overwhelmed, and hide in my drawing.
I follow both of these author’s blogs, and they are most enjoyable.
I wish both lots of sales! 🤗🤗
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Hi Resa, I am usually quite good about getting through my enormous TBR, but I am always a little wary of sci fi because I don’t always enjoy it. Miira is actually wonderful. It is a character driven story in an intriguing AI setting. Happy Hour is fun and I enjoyed the MC’s journeys around parts of Europe through the eyes of an American youngster.
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this second one looks a hoot 🙂
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HI John, I found it light and amusing. Thank you
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An intriguing plot that was also on Star Trek. Looks like a great read. Thank you
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Great reviews!
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Great reviews, as always.
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I’m glad you enjoyed them, Edward.
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