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Funny SiFi from Barry J. House

I Was Probed By Aliens And Lived To Tell The Tale is a mildly amusing work, if your funny
bone was tickled by Red Dwarf, by way of Bevis and Butthead. Don't expect anything too clever, and you won't be disappointed. The writing is adequate, with the sole exception of Will Brown using the British swear word bloody as a punctuation mark. It's not offensive, just a little irritating due to over use.


Depth, insight, clever characterization, fascinating answers to the alien abduction mythos, are all completely absent from this book. What is does have is an abundance of silly, light-hearted, typically British humor, detailing the abduction and subsequent adventures of Will Brown. Unlike the legions of unfortunate Americans whose abduction experience leads to all manner of unpleasantness, Will Brown finds himself an odd looking alien friend. The alien in question is from Tau Ceti and is named "one who yearns for the sweetest sessric pond, even before the third milking of Teuhleuhlas's teat" which translates into English as John Smith. The true form of this critter is apparently so horrible that it chooses to mask itself with a kinder image; something described as looking like the inside of a tripe bin at an abattoir! However, before any friendship can develop, our unwitting hero must first undergo the obligatory anal probe, in order to comply with Tau Ceti law.

Nether regions duly inspected, Will Brown finds himself in the middle of a murderous conspiracy, and is hired by John Smith as his personal bodyguard. To this end he is equipped with a ray gun that would delight the Men In Black. Settings range from "mild headache" all the way up to "destroy planet mode." Naturally, Will Brown manages to save his new friend from the immediate danger, which allows this extraterrestrial Butch and Sundance to explore part of a strange new world, seek out new life, etc. Key parts of these exploits are visualized in a series of full page cartoon illustrations from Terry Cooper.
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Robert Sheckley's Mindswap

First impression of the word "Mindswap", gives me a feelings of both joy and horror. Joy in
MindSwap
Mindswap, Robert Sheckley
the sense that wish i could swap my mind with people like Jule Verne, Leonardo de v, but it gives a horror feelings thinking about some psychopath taking over my mind. Anyway that just a title of Robert Sheckley's new Science fiction book.


The nature of reality, and the consequences of living in a universe where reality seems to depend to some extent on our own perceptions and expectations is one of those topics that inspires writers to deep and serious discussions packed with insight into the human condition and its place in a hostile universe. Thank goodness, then, that Robert Sheckley came along to skewer all those pretentious and serious discussions with a series of novels that took serious subjects like philosophy, cosmology, and the nature of reality and mixed them all up into one hilarious concoction that left his readers certain that even if the nature of reality is not readily comprehensible, it sure is funny. Mindswap ostensibly chronicles the adventures of one Marvin Flynn, a young man who longs to travel the galaxy but can't afford to go anywhere off Earth. The alternative is mind-swapping, a process by which one being swaps bodies with another being from a different planet, thus allowing for the pleasure of travel much less expensively. Mind-swapping is reputed to be dangerous, but Marvin goes against his friend's advice and tries it anyway. His adventures begin on Mars, and when Marvin discovers that the Martian with whom he has swapped bodies is a criminal who has stolen Marvin's body, things quickly get progressively weirder and funnier


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The Android's Dream

Prologue:
 The Android's Dream
The Android's Dream

The fate of Earth, lowest of the low in galactic society, hangs on a missing sheep—who turns out to be hidden inside a woman named Robin Baker......
Details:
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