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In the near-future US the struggle for survival pushes citizens to breaking point as relationships fracture along lines of class and race.
Science Fiction
Season Pass includes both ebooks in the Revolution series
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The Reparation Wars have begun!
People are starving. Biogenetic adaptations are prevalent amongst the privileged—and the poor are being ground to a sharp and dangerous point.
These are stories of the leaders and the followers, the victims, heroes, and the everyday people caught in history's wake, chief among them Dr. Ezekiel Carter, a genius in his field who decides to offer genetic reparations to those being left behind.
In this world, what will become of the people at the fringes and more than that of humanity itself?
Honoured at the Carl Brandon Awards 2011.
"The history of class struggle and racial injustice collide with the future of bio-technology in a tale that offers a prescient view of where America may be headed. Ideas abound but never get in the way of the story. It's immediately engrossing and moves like a rocket."
Jeffrey Ford (Nebula Award winning author)
A reading from R/evolution.
A reading from R/evolution.
Thoughtful, precisely written, well-designed and powerful, Johnson's R/evolution is a book filled with likeable, admirable, 3-D characters (as well as some unpleasant ones). It's about the future struggle for Black emancipation, but while it plainly acknowledges the basic right of that desire, it draws attention to the flaws of extreme thinking, the quandaries that must be considered or else the cause be willfully misunderstood (and even when they are considered, it still is), and underscores how easily equality is ripped away from-or never even truly within the grasp-of those who have always been systematically and systemically oppressed. It's about classism and racism, systemised and individual. I loved it and I'm hungry for the next part, Evolution. If you want books that are truly meaningful, this one's for you.
If you've got an interest in the human condition, an anarchist's desire to change the system, or if you just want to read a story that takes society's current nightmares and places them forefront in the imagination, this one's for you. I recommend buying both in the duology and reading them one after the other.
R/evolution is a novella that takes different short sections on different characters to present a dystopic view of the future, where America has been subsumed by race and class problems and genetic engineering is the norm.
This is a novella/ a series of interconnected stories about the war for reperations, race and class, and the role biogenetics could play in this.
It's fantastic writing, super imaginative and has excellent pacing (it's like a page turner), too. Highly recommend!
A novel about a future USA destroyed by brutal anti-Black racism, wealth inequality, lack of healthcare and climate change. So, barely SF at all, really.
The scope of this series of interconnected tales is nothing short of epic. A stylishly presented larger tale covering the state of the USA as it turns upon a near-future of decreasing resources and heavy social unrest. Thematically, this is not a frivolous book; it is politically driven with strong views on racial and social discrimination…
Thoughtful, precisely written, well-designed and powerful, Johnson's R/evolution is an epic in a nutshell, a Tardis in a book.
Tenea D. Johnson's science fiction series, exploring race, reparations, and technology in a near-future US.
Book 1 of 2
In the near-future US the struggle for survival pushes citizens to breaking point as relationships fracture along lines of class and race.
Book 2 of 2
Over a century after being gifted with exceptional genetic adaptations, William Woods still walks the earth, as strong and physically healthy as the day he was born. The country, however, is not so fortunate.
Both books in the Revolution series
In the near-future US the struggle for survival pushes citizens to breaking point as relationships fracture along lines of class and race.
In the near-future US the struggle for survival pushes citizens to breaking point as relationships fracture along lines of class and race.
Over a century after being gifted with exceptional genetic adaptations, William Woods still walks the earth, as strong and physically healthy as the day he was born. The country, however, is not so fortunate.
Can Claire unleash her full powers in time to save her companions—and the world?
An oppressed world locked inside a shell, without a single star to wish on. Now the void beyond has spat back Michael Formir, splintered in mind and body. And he may have brought something terrible with him.
In December of the year 1377, five children were burned to death in a suspicious fire. A small band of villagers travelled 200 miles in midwinter to demand justice for their deaths.
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