![]() Its not often that I identify with an 18 year old male character, for obvious reasons, but the way that Emmett is written is very clever. I absolutely adore this book for quite a few reasons. ![]() Emmett has no idea about the challenges he is going to face, but he knows that he is going to do everything he can to be in the top eight and land on Eden. He is regularly forced to decide between what is right, and what is easy, often forgetting that a life without his humanity is not worth living no matter how wealthy it is. Ten teenagers from low socio-economic backgrounds are offered a chance of a lifetime from global corporation, Babel embark on a journey to a new planet called Eden, learn valuable skills along the way, earn more money than most of the richest on Earth… but only if they can beat the other recruits and secure themselves a spot in the top eight.Įmmett is one of those recruits, and he is determined to make it to Eden to save his mother from cancer. ![]() ![]() A colleague who doesn’t usually read SciFi recommended this to me and it did not disappoint – so much so that I even went and bought my own copy. ![]() I recently read a book that made me realise just how much I appreciate a really good SciFi, and very real male protagonist: Nyxia by Scott Reintgen. ![]()
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