Return to Olympus

Science Fiction & Fantasy, Fantasy, Epic Fantasy, Science Fiction, Adventure
Cover of the book Return to Olympus by John R. Mason, Golden Apple, Wallasey
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John R. Mason ISBN: 9781904073567
Publisher: Golden Apple, Wallasey Publication: November 29, 2012
Imprint: Language: English
Author: John R. Mason
ISBN: 9781904073567
Publisher: Golden Apple, Wallasey
Publication: November 29, 2012
Imprint:
Language: English

Nothing much had happened in the five years since the war with Chaos. They had won, just, but their homeworld had been the price--placed into stasis to prevent any repetition.
Self-exiled to Earth, only a few of the survivors could now make the transformation back into the physical world and that was only to support Arielle with her annual Spring thing--it kept the place ticking over nicely, but was not essential. This was no future for any of them and underneath they all knew it. They were merely in their own form of stasis. Until, Dee dropped her bombshell. For some time she'd had that awful feeling that a tap had been left running back home. She could not shake it from her mind. Something had gone very wrong and the horror was that she herself had set this in motion. Playing it over and over was not the answer; she had to find out for sure. Surya agreed, sanctioning Ion, Cappella and Dee to make a simple there and back, fact finder trip. But it was not going to be quite that simple. Surya had been waiting for any excuse to act. She gave Cappella a single momentous thought which would send her on a mission of her own. It was a long shot, but they both wanted to know something else; if it might just be possible for them to go home, to make a return to Olympus. The sequel to "The Kronos Factor".

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Nothing much had happened in the five years since the war with Chaos. They had won, just, but their homeworld had been the price--placed into stasis to prevent any repetition.
Self-exiled to Earth, only a few of the survivors could now make the transformation back into the physical world and that was only to support Arielle with her annual Spring thing--it kept the place ticking over nicely, but was not essential. This was no future for any of them and underneath they all knew it. They were merely in their own form of stasis. Until, Dee dropped her bombshell. For some time she'd had that awful feeling that a tap had been left running back home. She could not shake it from her mind. Something had gone very wrong and the horror was that she herself had set this in motion. Playing it over and over was not the answer; she had to find out for sure. Surya agreed, sanctioning Ion, Cappella and Dee to make a simple there and back, fact finder trip. But it was not going to be quite that simple. Surya had been waiting for any excuse to act. She gave Cappella a single momentous thought which would send her on a mission of her own. It was a long shot, but they both wanted to know something else; if it might just be possible for them to go home, to make a return to Olympus. The sequel to "The Kronos Factor".

More books from Golden Apple, Wallasey

Cover of the book The Kronos Factor by John R. Mason
Cover of the book Last Shuttle to Planet Earth by John R. Mason
Cover of the book Dilation Effect by John R. Mason
Cover of the book The Fletcher Chronicles by John R. Mason
Cover of the book The Phaeton Condition by John R. Mason
Cover of the book Binary Z by John R. Mason
Cover of the book The Resurrection Roger Diment by John R. Mason
Cover of the book The Typhon Intervention by John R. Mason
Cover of the book From Carthage Then I Came by John R. Mason
Cover of the book Tower of Rizwan by John R. Mason
Cover of the book BAZOZZ ZZZ DZZ by John R. Mason
Cover of the book A Perfect Shade by John R. Mason
Cover of the book One is One by John R. Mason
Cover of the book Matrix by John R. Mason
Cover of the book Moons of Triopus by John R. Mason
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy