| "An outstanding writer." C J Cherryh |
From Publishers Weekly
At the end of this preachy near-future tale of a black messiah, the first of a new series, SF veteran Dalmas (The Lizard War) acknowledges that he drew his hero's teachings from Chelsea Quinn Yarbro's four "Michael books," the Bible and thinkers ranging from Jacques Barzun to Paramhansa Yogananda. A blend of Eastern and Western prophets, Ngunda Elija Aran can heal others and levitate himself while offering love, rebirth and redemption in a violent, economically depressed America, where at least race and gender appear no longer to be issues (the U.S. president is a black woman). Many fear that Aran's Millennium movement is merely another cult out to make money and converts, and much of the overwrought narrative concerns his enemies' efforts to assassinate him. Insisting he's not Christ reborn, Aran predicts the imminent arrival of a vague "Infinite Soul" to coincide with a natural disasterâ"an asteroid on a collision course with Earth. Fans of apocalyptic fiction who can overlook the often clumsy, plodding prose will be in heaven. The icky jacket art, depicting a black man caught in the cross-hairs of a gun sight against an American flag backdrop, says it all.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Genre: Science Fiction
At the end of this preachy near-future tale of a black messiah, the first of a new series, SF veteran Dalmas (The Lizard War) acknowledges that he drew his hero's teachings from Chelsea Quinn Yarbro's four "Michael books," the Bible and thinkers ranging from Jacques Barzun to Paramhansa Yogananda. A blend of Eastern and Western prophets, Ngunda Elija Aran can heal others and levitate himself while offering love, rebirth and redemption in a violent, economically depressed America, where at least race and gender appear no longer to be issues (the U.S. president is a black woman). Many fear that Aran's Millennium movement is merely another cult out to make money and converts, and much of the overwrought narrative concerns his enemies' efforts to assassinate him. Insisting he's not Christ reborn, Aran predicts the imminent arrival of a vague "Infinite Soul" to coincide with a natural disasterâ"an asteroid on a collision course with Earth. Fans of apocalyptic fiction who can overlook the often clumsy, plodding prose will be in heaven. The icky jacket art, depicting a black man caught in the cross-hairs of a gun sight against an American flag backdrop, says it all.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Genre: Science Fiction
Used availability for John Dalmas's The Second Coming
See all available used copies of this book at: Abebooks UK or Abebooks US
Hardback Editions
April 2004 : Hardback
| Title: The Second Coming (The Millennium Series) Author(s): John Dalmas ISBN: 0-7434-8816-4 / 978-0-7434-8816-7 (USA edition) Publisher: Baen Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
Paperback Editions
August 2005 : Mass Market Paperback
| Title: The Second Coming (Baen Science Fiction) Author(s): John Dalmas ISBN: 1-4165-0903-8 / 978-1-4165-0903-5 (USA edition) Publisher: Baen Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
January 2004 : Paperback
| Title: The Second Coming Author(s): John Dalmas Publisher: Baen Books Availability: Amazon More details... |
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