And The Sun Taketh...
by
Book Details
About the Book
A hero's endeavor collapses into a terrorist's best-case scenario for the destruction of the earth. A cataclysmic event inadvertently causes a violent 1000 mph tornadic whirlwind from the sun evaporating water from the earth’s oceans and lakes. This lust-for-adventure sci-fi book about climate change takes on some of the world's greatest modern-day threats and global environmental issues as nature retaliates against humanity’s complacent destruction of Mother Earth’s environment. Will our hero’s environmental project send him further into loneliness? Will he self-actualize the saying, “the road to hell is paved with good intentions?” Or will his project save humanity from its global environmental issues and restore our relationship with Mother Earth? It’s one of those sci-fi books that tantalize the mature adult reader, but it’s not for the faint-hearted. It might be one of the best sci-fi fantasy books to explore climate change and global warming as our hero searches for a way forward through the malaise of despondency.
About the Author
Leo Lysucor has been working on this first book of his epic adventure novel for sixteen years and has matured concurrently with the novel’s characters. Hopefully this novel’s sequels will be launched in the near future. Love, lust, religion, racial and ethnic tensions are all within the author’s troubled perspective. He has painstakingly labored on the development of his characters, male and female, so that his readers will experience the author’s love/hate relationship with each of them and feel their moral and physical conflicts, their agonies and ecstasies. His fear for the future of humanity is palpable. However, he inspires a way forward, not through science fiction, but rather through science probable. His writing rekindles our heartfelt quest for the freedom to evolve our minds so that we can combat the challenges of life’s bitter realities. The author wishes to remain anonymous as current reality has taught him that humanity is severely threatened by its inhumanity.