Books often paint a picture of the world around us: its physical and social aspects, its history and mythology. They may paint a picture that is not actually true, but they are interesting and often exciting; they may paint a picture that is true, but often disturbing and upsetting. They may paint a picture of a future world like the one we have today only much, much worse, dystrophic. Or, as this series of novels do, books can also paint the picture of a world that is much, much better than the one we have today.
Looking into the future, positive imagination is the tool used in these books. And it is not just the world we see around us today that inspires, it is also the world we have always dreamed of.
A second chance, if you will.
In W. Mahlon Purdin’s universe our world that has already solved all its problems and has moved on. It’s the “moving on” part that is most exciting It’s the lives the characters live together that entices. It’s the rich depth of details around them in their new worlds and how they interact and explore them that are the adventures. This interaction is the key to everything in these new worlds. In W. Mahlon Purdin’s future, we are all much, much closer together, we are all inspired by the opportunities around us, and we are all working together to expand awareness, increase understanding, and redefine freedom and affection.
This excitement and anticipation of wonders is waiting for you.
In “The Rise of Farson Uiost,” there is a genesis of hope and exodus of desperation as the human race overcomes imminent destruction and finds its safe harbor.In the process, humanity overcomes its violent past, avoids an existential threat, turns enemies into friends, survives a disaster, and journeys, as a united race, to a distant destination as mysterious as anything ever known.
In ‘Sargasso,” humanity’s new situation clarifiesas they form a system of organization more open and honest, where everyone knows everything about each other, and where their attention turns to things of hope and promise, of collaboration and cooperation, and of learning new definitions and seeking new horizons. They build six new worlds for the 10.8 billion people of old Earth: Azure, a water world; Edge a world made of enormous diamond cliffs; Echo, a world containing all the knowledge and histories of the human race; Range, a wild west world of wonders; Berg, a world of ice hiding another secret world within; and Wild, a world of animals and people who love them. In this book, the new human race defeats a daunting foe in an epic space chase, and yet the attacking forces, in the end, learn the truth and … well, wait until you read what happens.
Also in this volume, there are deep background stories that reveal exciting lives of promise and challenge, and explain much of what is to come.
In “The Dreams of Ida Rothschild,” a young girl’s wasted life shadows the wasted and arrogant destruction of Old Earth’s senseless organization and the harsh depletion of the planet. In this volume, the Emer ScreenMasters discover a new race of beings, who have been with us for eons – with a surprise ending – that maps out the long-hidden secrets of the human race. This book also offers a planet-by-planet tour of the new planets and their peoples, a new exploration of spatial dimensions, time travel, and new molecular travel capabilities, all revealing discoveries of epic proportions.
These three books describe a life that is not a chain of disasters and of lives and futures ruined. Rather, it shows us how much more humanity has to offer and how much better our lives can be. The human race’s future becomes the universe’s a brightest star. It shows those values existing in today’s world – struggling to shine – that, in tomorrow’s unfolding world of fulfillment, blossom brightly into a supernova of surprising hope and inspiration.