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A collection of 5 contemporary tales of science fiction and fantasy by Indiana author G. S. Hargrave:
Doctor Ramani’s Children: A modern-day genius on a mission to permanently alter what it means to be human–whether anyone else likes it or not;
BD-428: A soldier of the near future, whose survival depends on an ambulating piece of equipment that may have just become sentient;
The Jade Cicada: An entomologist follows the lowly object of his studies across an unseen boundary, and finds himself in decidedly unfamiliar territory;
On Some Bright Stream: A nuclear physicist discovers that the price of understanding can sometimes be a quantum of pure, unadulterated horror;
Bibliophiles: In which one of the strangest aspiring writers you’re ever likely to meet crosses paths with a mysterious old book, and a sinister character that is even stranger.
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Doctor Ramani's Children and Other Stories
2012, Black Griffin Books
Paperback
0615589960 9780615589961
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Excerpts
Well, this was another day when it was raining, and we had the lights turned on inside the bookstore. It was just the sort of day when I might have surprised my reflection, but I didn’t. Instead, something surprised me.
There was no one else in the bookstore on this particular day. Andy had brought us our books before the rain had started, and Pandora and Felicia were sitting on the Oriental rug between the leather reading chairs, going through the new boxes. I was sitting on the edge of the counter near the register as I sometimes do, watching the rain through the bookstore’s big front window.
A black car went by on the street outside, its windshield wipers working hard against the slanting drops. The car splashed water up from a puddle as it passed, and then the car was gone.
That was when I saw it. I saw its shape in the air by where the splashed up water hadn’t gone.
I watched it for a moment, outlined now by the falling rain drops, wondering what it might be. Clearly it was something very odd. It was certainly more than something not really there at all.
I glanced around toward Pandora and Felicia to see if maybe they had seen, but they hadn’t. They were still on the floor with the new boxes of books. They were looking at one book in particular—an oddly heavy book, Pandora had said, that she couldn’t remember having ordered. Pandora was reading something out loud that had been penned on the final few pages, which had been left empty of any printed text. The ink was yellowish–brown and the inscription lengthy; the words sounded strange and had a very peculiar sort of rhythm to them.
The preceding paragraphs suggest something of the tone of the story from which they're taken. They're from Something in the Rain, the second part of Bibliophiles.
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