A Small and Distant Galaxy: The Third Quadrant | Austin Macauley Publishers ;
Best Book Publishers UK | Austin Macauley Publishers

By: Susannah Israel

A Small and Distant Galaxy: The Third Quadrant

Pages: 298 Ratings: 5.0
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Book 2 follows a science survey into the Third Quadrant, a desolate wasteland left by ancient asteroids. Scenes of friends and family back on the crew’s home planets are woven through the story. New characters join with major and minor characters we met in the first book to crew the expedition. They explore a desert planet and intervene in the shunning of a young cave dweller, who joins them on the ship. While surveying an unexpected gas giant, they lose a crew member to its toxic gas cloud. The expedition crew moves on, not knowing he survived, and we follow his healing and acceptance into the planet’s forest culture. The third planet the crew finds is too massive to approach, but the debris orbiting it proves to hold important clues. The different threads of narrative in the book come together as a shift in the currents of time and space, leaving people with very different memories of shared reality. The crew return home, but there are several surprises on the way. They find their lost crew member again, mourning for the love he left behind. Back on their home planets, there is still one more mystery to resolve.

Susannah Israel is an art critic and a renowned sculptor with a lifelong love of science fiction. Her art works are allegorical narratives filled with fantastical people and animals which appear in public and private collections around the world. Five years ago, she began writing about an unknown galaxy, bringing together her love of storytelling and her passion for science fiction in the series, A Small and Distant Galaxy. Israel lives and works in her studio in Oakland, California.

Customer Reviews
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  • Dr Bernard Fennell

    I read this book straight through, then enjoyedly re-read my favorite chapters. Reading has been my passion for most of a century. Yet, science fiction has not been my favorite genre. Susannah Israel's captivating book has gone a long way in altering my hierarchy of reads. When it was revealed that humans had been stranded in an unknown galaxy, it became a guarantee that this book would not be set aside. Vivid, clear, colorful descriptions of personable characters, intriguing, complex new worlds, creatures, environments and scenery began in the very first chapter. The author, with her degree in biochemistry, gives plausible structure to each world she creates. There are planets rich with freshwater lakes and rivers, where it is natural that they farm and fish. There are education-centered worlds with vast information libraries available to all in the galaxy. Some inhabitants of the Galaxy are pleased to restrict personal interaction to trade; some love exploring the galaxy. The author anointed the explorers with sufficient good sense to know when it was time to move on. Each world is proud of its place in the galaxy. This flavor of engaging narrative and Human interest elements, featuring respect, curiousity, impossible odds, hope, truth and justice all permeate this great read. Israel judiciously set communication platforms for each planet; all language is polite and respectful, simple greetings are enhanced. Elements of cooperative social structures, which I experienced directly in the Foreign Service as a young man,from Fiji to Sri Lanka to South Africa, I also found in Israel’s imaginative science fiction. Communal eating is the standard on every planet. The idea of the several planets in the Galaxy specializing in the activities best suited to the inhabitants’ talents and their planets’ natural resources was a novel approach, a live and let live notion of self-development that, unlike earthly military-powered societies bullying others, does not lead to planetary destruction. In this small and distant galaxy, the simple greeting “Good morning,” includes, “tomorrow will be even better.” At the end I was left with the thought: What if…

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