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The Many Selves of Katherine North
Unavailable
The Many Selves of Katherine North
Unavailable
The Many Selves of Katherine North
Ebook375 pages4 hours

The Many Selves of Katherine North

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this ebook

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'In this exhilarating, metaphysical white-knuckle ride, Geen takes us into the other worlds that crouch, slink and bark around us ... It will leave you reeling' - Charles Foster, author of Being a Beast
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Kit has been projecting into other species for seven years.

Longer than anyone else at ShenCorp.

Longer than any of the scientists thought possible.

But lately she has the feeling that when she jumps she isn't alone…
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'Startlingly fresh ... Along with the protagonist I became a tiger, an eagle, a whale. I hunted, flew and swam in this extraordinary book which goes to the heart of what it means to be alive in a shared universe' - Jane Shemilt, author of Daughter

'A compulsively readable sci-fi thriller ... a vivid and wildly engaging world around an incredibly compelling protagonist ... this is a great book, full stop' - Maine Edge
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LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 2, 2016
ISBN9781408858462
Unavailable
The Many Selves of Katherine North
Author

Emma Geen

Emma Geen is a speculative thinker and writer whose fiction draws on her education in Psychology and Philosophy. She is studying for a PhD in Creative Writing at Bath Spa University, where she won the 2012 Janklow & Nesbit Bath Spa Prize. This is her debut novel. emmacgeen.wordpress.com @EmmaCGeen

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Rating: 3.2999999333333334 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I loved the sections where the protagonist lived life through animal senses - very vivid and expressive - however the story that wrapped round these luminous interludes was fairly lame. If the author had thought through the science and tech implications more rigorously it could have been a very good book, as it is the idea of building live animal bodies from the size of a spider to a whale in a lab then shipping them around the world into their "natural" habitats for research into wild behaviour is totally implausible as written. The rest of the story is just standard EvilCorp machinations.