[Houston, 2030] • Houston, 2030
![[Houston, 2030] • Houston, 2030](/cover/2BNvvbuHCUHJMIBd/big/[Houston,%202030]%20%e2%80%a2%20Houston,%202030.jpg)
- Authors
- McKay, Mike
- Publisher
- Mike McKay
- Tags
- science fiction , serial killer , poverty in america , apocalypse adventures , veteran disability , collapse of the united states , covert operations , detective fbi , dystopian climate change , peak oil
- Date
- 2014-01-09T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.55 MB
- Lang
- en
This novel is both a classic police detective and a social science fiction. Or, you may call it a dystopian warning. As the name suggests, the action happens in not-so-distant future. The detective part is thrilling: an FBI Special Agent follows a serial killer case. In the science fiction part, the reader will not find any robots, or flying cars, or super-computers. The end of our world does not come from zombies raised from the graves (although one “zombie” is positively present.) There are no viruses that kill a person in under thirty seconds (although, there are viruses that positively can kill.) There are no continent-size volcanoes, asteroid showers and aliens from outer space, and no Noah's Flood (although one flood is positively present, but very local.) Does not sound too scary to be a good read? Well, the global catastrophe described in the book is presently on-going! The world created by the author's imagination is remarkably similar and at the same time - remarkably dissimilar to our own, and yet – believable.