Our Top Five Science-Fiction Novels

Today, we have decided to list the Top Five Science-Fiction novels done by our own authors! Whether you want to learn about beings from another planet, or prefer the twists and turns of time-travel, we’re bound to have something for you.

02 June, 2017

Today, we have decided to list the Top Five Science-Fiction novels done by our own authors! Whether you want to learn about beings from another planet, or prefer the twists and turns of time-travel, we’re bound to have something for you.

Number One

Extreme Vacuum, by Andrew Tichbon

When brilliant physicist, Jess Rodriguez, designs the most advanced spacecraft the Earth has ever seen, she becomes a target for an unscrupulous industrialist, whose sole intent is to destroy her. But is that the worst of Jess's problems? Could it be that her new craft has also raised interest from beyond our galaxy? So much so, that it might not just be Jess's life on the line... but the whole of mankind!

Number Two

Time Paradox, by J.P. Borgatti

The year is 2036 and Aaron Stantan is a respected and dedicated Amalgamated States Federation (ASF) technician.

The ASF was formed after the instability of the Middle East, where the world was teetering on the brink of a nuclear disaster.

Whilst being teleported back to a 1547 Monastery for the ASF, Aaron is trying to establish the elusive history behind a mysterious rock.

Will Aaron uncover the secrets of this ‘rock' on earth and will this be all he discovers?

After getting more than he bargained the race is on for Aaron and his team as they try to stop what our ancestors left us as a legacy.

Can they right what is wrong? Is it even wrong at all? Time will only tell.

Number Three

High Voltage, by Anthony Price

Kellen is having trouble at school. He struggles to impress his tutor, Professor Drake, at the Zygonia School of Excellence, and he can't get the attention of the girl of his dreams, Linzi. And if he thought things were going to get any simpler, he was wrong.

A freak accident in the lab leaves Kellen with the ability to control electricity. At first his transformation provides another way he can't lead a normal life, but he soon realises that this might be just the thing to become something more than normal. It's a long way to the top if you want to be a superhero, but dressing as a masked vigilante – whom he names Voltage – Kellen soon finds himself in a plot to unearth the mystery behind the recent robbery of an ancient Egyptian staff at the Zygonia City Museum, which has left even the police stumped.

Will Kellen be able to balance his private life and his newfound responsibilities, and has he met his match in the shadowy businessman who seems to be at the centre of it all?

Number Four

The Tracker, by Michael C. Davey

Set in the year 15,701 this is the story of Caleb Stone, the eldest son and black sheep of the illustrious Stone family and vast Stone industrial empire. On the run from his enemies, Caleb is forced to become a Tracker, an individual picked by chance whose task is to track down criminals who are beyond the capabilities of local planetary resources. Most Trackers are dead by their seventh track but Caleb manages to survive to his twentieth, when he is allowed to retire.

A year later he is asked to solve a riddle to find a river, set, it is believed, in a remote part of the galaxy; a task which all agree is ridiculous. This is the story of Caleb's search for the lost river and what he finds there. It is also a love story.

Number Five

Between Yesterdays, by Jessica Meats

The Defenders have to fight for their lives, and their world, on a daily basis. Whether it's to defend against insatiably hungry mutations that don't feel pain, or the well-meaning but ignorant Linears, they cannot rest until peace reigns. They have been fighting for so long they are not sure whether peace will ever be possible again.

When a young woman arrives, claiming to be sent from the future to help them, the Defenders must determine if this is just another trap.