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The Quantum Connection
by Travis S. Taylor

The Breathtaking Sequel to Warp Speed—Science Fiction Written by a Real Scientist Who is Also a Gifted Writer.

Steven Montana, computer whiz and hacker extraordinaire, was attending college in Ohio when his world fell apart. A swarm of huge meteors fell all over the world, on Europe, on the United States, and in particular on Steven's home town in California. In an instant, his family and all his friends were gone.

Suffering fits of deep depression, he dropped out of college and ended up working as a repairman in a video games store, where he did a brilliant job of repairing a 30-year-old video game. That caught the attention of the game's owner, who happened to be in a position to get Steven a government job, cracking computer codes, and reverse engineering unusual hardware.
When he was given a tiny piece of hardware to examine as a "test," he worked out its functions so well that he and his boss were called to Washington for a Top Secret meeting. They asked him countless questions, yet declined to answer his; but he would soon learn all the answers.

The "meteor" onslaught that had orphaned him had actually been a brief and still secret war between the U.S and its enemies (as told in Warp Speed) using a new warp drive technology that was more secret than top secret. Another secret was that U.S. had been sending faster-than-light ships to other star systems. Most secret of all was that unfriendly aliens were observing the Earth, and while U.S. spaceships were not quite in a war with the unknown aliens, they were shooting at the intruders.

Whether any of these answers would do Steven any good was an open question because he learned them only after he was abducted by those very same aliens and was held prisoner on one of their ships orbiting Saturn. At first, he was one of three human prisoners, but he had just seen the aliens completely dissect one of the three, and it looked like either Steven, or the Russian girl who was his fellow prisoner, were scheduled to be the next alien lab experiment. . . .

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Travis S. Taylor—"Doc" Taylor to his friends—has earned his soubriquet the hard way: He has a Doctorate in Optical Science and Engineering, a Master's degree in Physics, a Master's degree in Aerospace Engineering, all from the University of Alabama in Huntsville; a Master's degree in Astronomy from the University of Western Sydney, and a Bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering from Auburn University. Dr. Taylor has worked on various programs for the Department of Defense and NASA for the past sixteen years. He's currently working on several advanced propulsion concepts, very large space telescopes, space-based beamed energy systems, and next generation space launch concepts. In his copious spare time, Doc Travis is also a black belt martial artist, a private pilot, a SCUBA diver, has raced mountain bikes, competed in triathlons, and has been the lead singer and rhythm guitarist of several hard rock bands. He currently lives with his wife Karen, his daughter Kalista, two dogs Stevie and Wesker, and his cat Kuro, in north Alabama.

Praise for Warp Speed, the prequel:

"Reads like Doc Smith writing Robert Ludlum; beautiful, vivacious female astronauts, sterling-hearted redneck scientists and evil mercenaries bent upon galaxy-wide conquest. You won't want to put it down. FLUBELLS AWAY!" —John Ringo

"You thought they didn't write 'em like this anymore Doc Travis does!" —Jim Baen

Published 4/1/2005
SKU: 0743498968
Ebook Price: $6.00 

Warp Speed
Warp Speed
Choosers of the Slain
Choosers of the Slain
Ghost
Ghost
We Few
We Few


W200701 January 2007 WebScription
W200701 January 2007 WebScription
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Product Rating: (3.24)   # of Ratings: 17   (Only registered customers can rate)

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Showing comments 1-10 of 10
1. bill on 4/28/2008, said:

If you didnt like the superman future you must not like Gordon Dickson. I found it fun, and enjoyable to read
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2. Christopher on 11/20/2007, said:

Do yourself a favor and re-read a David Weber or David Drake book. This is written like a cheasy Hollywood geek to superman movie. Without the deep plot.
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3. robert on 9/3/2007, said:

would be a lot better if it was more realistic. this is more science fantasy then science fiction. too bad because the sequel was quite good.
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4. paul on 5/25/2007, said:

A sadly written story that won't be content until the hero is Godlike with ultimate powers including immortality, teleportation (anywhere in the galaxy) and the power to sound ignorant after downloading all knowledge. Stick with one technology/idea (or two) and develop the damn characters! Enjoyed Warp Speed... this was awful.
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5. David on 3/17/2007, said:

Superman via technology. Or don't mess with us humans, you might get us mad!
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6. Dennis on 3/5/2007, said:

The plot has too much adolescent wish fulfillment in it.
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7. Bryan on 2/14/2007, said:

dissapointing after the very fun Warp Speed. Taylors strength is his ability to make real science make sense and gives the technobabble some credibility... The technobabble in Quantum Connection quickly deteriorates into something out of a David Eddings novel. The last half of the book is one case after another of "Oh we have a insurmountable obstacle in my path?... no problem I'll just bestow God-like powers upon my character and blast into theoretical subatomic elements" unfortunately without the solid technobabble the rest of the books weaknesses come shining through.
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8. Justin on 12/9/2006, said:

Like the previous book, Warp Speed, many of the technologies seem of the 'too good to be true' sort, that goes way beyond basic suspension of disbelief needed for a good story.
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9. Bryan on 12/4/2006, said:

I loved it. Great Concept, started kinda slow, but once it got going it was great. I've re-read this book a number of times.
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10. Ramin on 11/20/2006, said:

awful
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Showing comments 1-10 of 10
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