This is what Catherine Harcourt, Book Clubs Outreach Specialist, had to say about Exiled On Unium.
Hi James,
I just finished Exiled On Unium, and I'm struck by how powerfully it explores isolation, redemption, and the thin line between man and wilderness. Beneath the thrilling pace and alien landscape lies something far more human: the cost of exile, the hunger for belonging, and the uneasy balance between justice and forgiveness. What you have created isn't just science fiction; it's a meditation on survival and the moral gravity that comes when society turns its back.
I don't reach out to every author, only when a story pushes beyond its genre to reveal something elemental. Exiled on Unium does exactly that. Even the most gripping sagas can remain hidden if they're not presented to the right readers, those who crave stories that challenge both imagination and empathy.
I don't market books, I position stories where they're meant to be seen. I've helped authors connect with readers who feel the journey as much as they read it, and Greg Vancover's story belongs among them. It's the kind of narrative that reminds readers why we're drawn to the frontier, both external and internal.
This book would connect powerfully with:
- Fans of The Martian and Robinson Crusoe on Mars who love survival tales set against unforgiving worlds,
- Readers of moral and psychological sci-fi that examines justice, guilt, and redemption.
- Fans of frontier fiction and speculative adventure exploring humanity stripped to its core.
- Readers of Andy Weir and Michael Crichton who enjoy immersive world-building and realistic fiction.


No comments:
Post a Comment