Title: A Flash in Time
Author: J. N. Frye
Publisher: Readers Magnet LLC
ISBN: 9798890913517
Pages: 366
Genre: Science Fiction
Reviewed by: Jennifer Bailey
Pacific Book Review
In 2006 E-R-Mag Labs turned on a radio antenna. One that is connected to “Enet” which is a communications net; it communicates with any special receiver worldwide. This includes ships and military units. As soon as the on switch is thrown, the transmitter explodes completely and a tree miles away vanishes taking 2 teens with it. Now the antenna has become the focal point for Earth’s magnetic energy, and absorbs electrical energy, as well as recharges itself. It has become that every 24 hours people and equipment begin to vanish. Those people are sent to a desert where they are hunted by what appear to be grey aliens. Aliens that seem to have followed a different evolutionary direction and appear to resemble dinosaurs and amphibians. All of this begs people to wonder if the end of time is near?
The novel starts off with a sense of weirdness in the air setting the stage that something is about to go wrong and sets off the chain of events which course throughout the novel. Readers are swept up into a fascinating story about the structure of the earth’s atmosphere and what could happen if the earth itself becomes overwhelmed with various electrical energy.
It is very evident author J.N. Frye knows a great deal about the science within this novel. He writes it in a way that is both entertaining and stimulating. Readers will view the use of technology like cell phones in a different light after reading this book. Impeccably written with science at the forefront creates a tale which not only entertains, but also educates readers on a subject they may not readily consider.
A Flash In Time is the perfect novel for fans of the science fiction genre, it has very possible themes and ideas that when you read it, you can envision it all come true. There is a lot of scientific information so it is greatly recommended for those who love science, and love thinking on what the possibilities could be with technology and science.