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  • The Terra Debacle: Prisoners at Area 51

  • Star Trails Tetralogy, Book 7
  • By: Marcha Fox
  • Narrated by: T. W. Ashworth
  • Length: 8 hrs and 58 mins
  • 4.0 out of 5 stars (1 rating)
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The Terra Debacle: Prisoners at Area 51 cover art

The Terra Debacle: Prisoners at Area 51

By: Marcha Fox
Narrated by: T. W. Ashworth
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Summary

It's May, 1978, and a normal night at Hill Air Force Base in Ogden, Utah - until a bogey shows up in their air space. It gets even stranger when the UFO requests permission to land. It changes its mind, but by then, F-16s escort it to the ground. A human girl in her early teens and a robot exit the craft, and a strange botanical lifeform is found onboard later that night by a USAF landing party. The vehicle, robot, and the strange plant are impounded and subsequently sent to Area 51. 

NASA astrobiologist Gabriel Greenley is called in to study this new lifeform that at first appears similar to a botanical species known as oxalis. As a psi-sensitive, Greenley quickly learns the specimen is highly intelligent and potentially dangerous when he attempts to take a leaf sample. He backs off, frustrated, and desperate to investigate the scientific details of this new botanical species that combines intelligence with a metabolism based on photosynthesis. Meanwhile, the specimen, a flora peda telepathis named Thyron from the planet Sapphira, is investigating his new environment through all frequencies of the electromagnetic spectrum as well as his suite of psychic abilities that includes remote viewing.

Greenley eventually gets his leaf sample and makes a ground-breaking discovery that he can never share, due to his security oaths and research agreement at this top secret facility. Eventually, however, he's confronted by an ethical dilemma that forces him to make a treasonous and potentially deadly decision.

A unique combination of hard science-fiction, suspense, intrigue, and a touch of humor, this story has been described as a "dark version of ET: The Extraterrestrial". Strong characterizations, a mysterious setting loaded with intrigue, and unexpected plot twists make this an unforgettable tale whether you're a science fiction fan, botanist, UFO aficionado, or simply enjoy a good story.

©2016 Marcha Fox (P)2018 Kalliope Rising Press

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Nothing on this low tech planet was easy.

May, 1978: After an alien space ship in need of repair lands on earth, two of the occupants leave before the ship can be searched. The remaining traveller is quickly found and, encased in a protective cage, transported with an 'expert', a natural biologist specialising in botony, to Area 51. Because Thyron, the alien, was a sentient telepathic walking plant, standing about two foot in height, and horrified to find himself on this primative, hostile and (from aplants eye view) cruel and barbaric world.

This inovative and gently humourous look at the earth from a plant's perspective is also a good S.F.thriller, nicely characterising several of the humans as well as the plant itself. The narrator, T.W.Ashworth, has a pleasant sing song delivery with good intonation and a smile in his voice. His interpretation of the individual character voicings is also distinctive and appropriate.

Overall, a fun book with a very firm basis in solid science fiction ideas. However, the constant stating of precise place and time, which takes between seventeen and twenty three seconds on every occasion, does become over intrusive.
My thanks to the rights holder of The Terra Debacle who, at my request, freely gifted me a complimentary copy via Audiobook Boom. It was pleasantly querky. An enjoyable read.

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