Our Sun Died, That Is Why We Are Here |
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Author:
| Heyman, Edward |
ISBN: | 978-1-4928-4654-3 |
Publication Date: | Sep 2013 |
Publisher: | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $8.30 |
Book Description:
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A civilization thousands of years older than when Earths first creatures crawled from the sea, learn that their sun will die and so will their planet die within the next two or three hundred years. In an attempt to keep their race and its history alive, they use every skilled person and all the resources on the planet to construct an enormous space ship. It is built in space, and when completed four thousand young, healthy men and women are sent to find an inhabitable planet somewhere...
More DescriptionA civilization thousands of years older than when Earths first creatures crawled from the sea, learn that their sun will die and so will their planet die within the next two or three hundred years. In an attempt to keep their race and its history alive, they use every skilled person and all the resources on the planet to construct an enormous space ship. It is built in space, and when completed four thousand young, healthy men and women are sent to find an inhabitable planet somewhere in the infinite vastness of space. After countless generations have lived and died during their search for a home, a beautiful blue planet is discovered. With their advanced technological skills the experts on the spaceship are able to watch and listen to Earth's radio and television transmission. Their people learn to speak and write English, which they think is the language most used on the planet. As their knowledge increases and the time of making contact grows closer, the ruling Council elects to name their spaceship, Explorer.Their study of Earth is thorough, and Explorer's leaders know they have something to bring with them that will end wars and bring peace and prosperity to every society on Earth. Their secret electrical power source will be sought by power cartels on earth and by governments.Who, where and when should they make the initial contact. Earth is the end of their search, will the people of Earth accept them? How will they handle the problems of integration and most of all, use their intelligence and advanced scientific skills to make planet Earth a place that will sustain life for as long as there is a sun?After eighteen years of silence and study, the gigantic spaceship is moved to a position 63,000 miles above Earth and directly over Washington D.C. The world knows it is there. Two astronauts land at the cherry farm owned by Jack Baker, Chief of Staff to President Conrad Oberti. Contact is established.