The Twice and Future Caesar, R.M. Meluch
The Twice and Future Caesar, R.M. Meluch
3 Rating(s)
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The Twice and Future Caesar

Author: R.M. Meluch

Narrator: John Glouchevitch

Unabridged: 11 hr 27 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/06/2017

Categories: Fiction, Science Fiction


Synopsis

For fans of explosive military science fiction with complex worldbuilding.
“Rousing far-future sci-fi novel…grand old-fashioned space opera.” —Publishers Weekly (starred)In the year 2448, the interstellar Empire of Rome spans an area almost as wide as the far-flung colonial worlds of the United States of America.Caesar Numa Pompeii is still rebuilding his shredded empire after the catastrophic war that his predecessor, Caesar Romulus, waged against the United States. War’s end left Romulus in a nanovirus-induced coma, captive of Caesar Numa.Numa has under his command a powerful living weapon—a patterner, an augmented man capable of synthesizing vast amounts of data into actionable intelligence.Now, Numa has lost his prisoner, and his patterner may have turned on him, while the U.S.S. Merrimack has lost the commander of her Fleet Marines, Colonel T. R. Steele.Events take a Mobius turn when fanatical devotees of Romulus rescue their fallen leader from his tortured captivity and fashion him into the most capable patterner ever created. Romulus is back, more insanely brilliant than ever. But without his queen, all the power in the universe means nothing. Romulus will move heaven and Earth and space and time to rescue his beloved Claudia.Admiral John Farragut returns to the space battle­ship Merrimack in an attempt to head off the impend­ing temporal catastrophe. Past and future hinge on a critical moment when time broke once before in the distant star cluster known as the Myriad.

About R.M. Meluch

R.M. Meluch sold her first short story at age seventeen. The Ninth Circle is her sixteenth published novel. She has worked on an archaeological dig in Israel, hacked a piece off the Berlin Wall, and tracked Alexander the Great around Greece and Egypt.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Phil

The concluding volume to the series is apt, bringing the series full circle. In the first installment The Myriad, the ending has a surprising twist. Basically, the Myriad, via wormholes that distorted time, were/are a civilization from 10 billion years ago. They did have primitive space travel (e.g.......more

Simultaneously infuriating and entertaining. The book lost at least one star for the endless rehashing of Kerry Blue's charms alone.......more

Goodreads review by Scott

Ms. Meluch uses the term Mobius strip to characterize her Merrimack novels; more accurately that should read "a whole basketful of Mobius strips". Timelines twist and change and diverge and history rarely, sometimes, repeats itself. The tangles can get so mind-bending, you just have to stop trying t......more