What could happen if climate change forced humanity to find a new home?
To make the journey we must leave behind our most cherished beliefs
and hatreds and have faith that God will find us again in the stars.
Act of God
Book 1: In the Beginning
By Jan Byron Strogh
Genre: Science Fiction, Space Opera
Earth is facing a coming ice age. Humanity has marshalled
its technology and resources in an attempt to delay the great cold; a diversion
necessary to maintain hope for the people. But some few know the truth. There
is little hope left on Earth. But there may still be hope in the stars.
Michael, ward of the church since childhood is summoned for
humanity's most ambitious and secret undertaking. Shepard the human race to a
new home.
Finished construction, 240 million kilometres from the sun
is the Ark. The ship designed to carry one half million souls in suspended
animation to a new world.
But the mission of the Ark is more than simply saving the
human species. Its creator, the New Unified Church must save the human spirit
and accomplish what humanity never attempted; bring together the religions of
the world and expunge the ancient hatreds that dominate doctrine.
But the cost to the church will be its very existence. In
order to unify, all agree that the Ark must not carry the symbols, books or
even the knowledge of any of the old religions. To survive, humanity must lose
God and have faith that God will find them in the stars.
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A graduate in computer science and electronics, Jan Byron
“J.B.” Strogh has had a successful career in the tech sector. Strogh is
interested in writing about the pattern of evolution manifest in both humanity
and machine. The series Act of God is based in science and contemplates the
long history of human spirituality and how the two must some day converge.
The blurb sounds very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
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