This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Mayet Ligad Yuhico will be awarding a $50 Amazon/BN GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.
US Colony Agent Brice O' Rourke is traumatised as a child when half the world disappears as waters rose because of climate change and when North Korea unleashed sentient human like droid soldiers to conquer lands for their hungry people.
When the US Congress passed laws allowing the Homo Roboticus Sollus and Aequilavum programs, Brice gains Ira, a sister, and meets a fellow droid agent Lee Jae Sung who saves her life during a mission.
As a new President wins on an anti-robotist, authoritarian stance vowing a pre-machine existence, will Brice defy her own government and risk her life to save loved ones from extinction?
“Homo Roboticus is a richly-imagined cautionary tale of a future earth in which long-feared climate disaster has actually happened, the world’s population is permanently at war, and robots have become almost more human than their creators.” --Susan Krawitz, author of Viva, Rose!, a Sydney Taylor Honor winner, National Jewish Book Award debut fiction finalist, and Spur Award finalist
Brice entered the glass portal. Whoosh! She closed her eyes as a machine sucked her thin suit and headgear from her body. And then the safety lights flashed, and she entered the safe house.
Its coolness was a welcome respite from the heat outside. Naked, she sat on a pod-shaped chair, closed her eyes, and waited for the rest of the ritual. A squadron of tiny cleaning machines whirred around her, thin brushes entering the crevices of her face and body, scrubbing them clean of toxic ash. When they flew away, spray jets descended from the ceiling and water cascaded down, washing away any debris. When the safety lights flashed again, she stood and stepped forward into drying gusts of air. With the flash of a single green light, she was cleared to leave the portal.
Her dark blue suit was hanging inside a cabinet by the door. As she dressed, she tried not to think how much she loathed this stiff, ugly, utilitarian garment. Instead, she turned her focus to the notes she would write about the Agni landscape. “Day 15. Han Machina survivor #2817 interview notes in Annex V. Still no daylight due to smog, pollutants enter the crevices of the body’s orifices, need for a mask 24/7. UNINHABITABLE.”
As always, a thin whirring Bee, her mechanical electronic monitor, had stood by during the cleaning ritual and was now hovering at its usual arm’s-length distance from her head. That soft, buzzing noise was her constant companion. There was nothing she could do that wouldn’t be observed by the Colony. She turned away from the Bee, as if to block out its presence.
Mayet Ligad Yuhico is the author of FOURTEEN DAYS, a work of romantic contemporary fiction published in 2011.
Based in Singapore since 2012, Mayet has shifted to the genre of speculative fiction in her new novel, HOMO ROBOTICUS, to ponder on the consequences of global warming and climate change.
Website: http://mayetligadyuhico.com
Newsletter: https://conta.cc/31y6SZK
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mayetlyuhico/
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8551130.Mayet_Ligad_Yuhico
Amazon Buy Link: https://www.amazon.com/Homo-Roboticus-Mayet-Ligad-Yuhico-ebook/dp/B07XG2H1XN
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Thanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for an amazing blog tour, Marianne. @GoddessFish
Delete- Mayet Ligad Yuhico
Thanks for hosting Homo Roboticus at straightfromlibrary.blogspot.com. Cheers! :)
ReplyDeleteIt has been great hearing about your book and although I am not the reader myself, my 2 sisters and 2 daughters are. They love hearing about the genre's they like and me helping them get to find books they will enjoy. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteYour comments about your two sisters and 2 daughters are so sweet, James. What genre do they like best?
DeleteSounds like a great read.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words, Rita. Have a great weekend ahead!
DeleteHappy Friday! Thanks for sharing the great post and for the awesome tour. I’m looking forward to checking this one out.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to your comments when you finally get hold of Homo Roboticus, Victoria. Happy Friday!
DeleteHappy Friday! I hope that you've had an enjoyable and successful book tour and I wish you the best of luck with all of your future endeavors. I am looking forward to reading your book. Have a great weekend!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Bea. Truly humbled by your kind words. Have a great weekend ahead. Cheers!
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