Humankind 2.0 (Tales of MI7, #16)

"Readers will find John Mordred to be one of the most appealing characters in fiction today." – Publisher's Daily.

"John Mordred comes alive on the page and is a character readers will not soon forget." – The Booklife Review.

 

MI7 is expecting an eccentric new recruit in the person of Chasha Jones, self-described (only partly tongue-in-cheek) as "the most intelligent woman in London." She's hard-working, insightful, and fun to work alongside. But the day she's due to begin, there's no sign of her. 

 

Then, outlandishly, it turns out she's hitched her wagon to a completely different star.

 

Specifically, she's joined forces with an eccentric Briton called Hector Raynebow. Raynebow used to be an environmentalist, but he's rejected all that on the grounds that humanity, in its present form, is incapable of saving the world: it is too self-centred, short-sighted, and fractious.

Don't worry, though, he has the perfect solution: Humankind 2.0, an exponential advance on homo sapiens, developed via cutting-edge gene technology. His "new humans" will, of course, be intelligent and rational enough to act with the necessary altruism.

Yet more than a few governments don't hear the words, "new humans"; they hear "super-soldiers". And the question is, assuming Raynebow really is capable of developing such things, who is going to get their hands on them first?

John Mordred is assigned to investigate. Once he's two thousand miles from home, and hemmed in by hostile forces, guess who turns up to help? Yes, it's Chasha Jones.
 

"James Ward brings protagonist John Mordred alive on the page … The author displays exceptional ability when it comes to storytelling." – Emerald Book Review.

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Humankind 2.0 (Tales of MI7, #16)

"Readers will find John Mordred to be one of the most appealing characters in fiction today." – Publisher's Daily.

"John Mordred comes alive on the page and is a character readers will not soon forget." – The Booklife Review.

 

MI7 is expecting an eccentric new recruit in the person of Chasha Jones, self-described (only partly tongue-in-cheek) as "the most intelligent woman in London." She's hard-working, insightful, and fun to work alongside. But the day she's due to begin, there's no sign of her. 

 

Then, outlandishly, it turns out she's hitched her wagon to a completely different star.

 

Specifically, she's joined forces with an eccentric Briton called Hector Raynebow. Raynebow used to be an environmentalist, but he's rejected all that on the grounds that humanity, in its present form, is incapable of saving the world: it is too self-centred, short-sighted, and fractious.

Don't worry, though, he has the perfect solution: Humankind 2.0, an exponential advance on homo sapiens, developed via cutting-edge gene technology. His "new humans" will, of course, be intelligent and rational enough to act with the necessary altruism.

Yet more than a few governments don't hear the words, "new humans"; they hear "super-soldiers". And the question is, assuming Raynebow really is capable of developing such things, who is going to get their hands on them first?

John Mordred is assigned to investigate. Once he's two thousand miles from home, and hemmed in by hostile forces, guess who turns up to help? Yes, it's Chasha Jones.
 

"James Ward brings protagonist John Mordred alive on the page … The author displays exceptional ability when it comes to storytelling." – Emerald Book Review.

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Humankind 2.0 (Tales of MI7, #16)

Humankind 2.0 (Tales of MI7, #16)

by James Ward
Humankind 2.0 (Tales of MI7, #16)

Humankind 2.0 (Tales of MI7, #16)

by James Ward

eBook

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Overview

"Readers will find John Mordred to be one of the most appealing characters in fiction today." – Publisher's Daily.

"John Mordred comes alive on the page and is a character readers will not soon forget." – The Booklife Review.

 

MI7 is expecting an eccentric new recruit in the person of Chasha Jones, self-described (only partly tongue-in-cheek) as "the most intelligent woman in London." She's hard-working, insightful, and fun to work alongside. But the day she's due to begin, there's no sign of her. 

 

Then, outlandishly, it turns out she's hitched her wagon to a completely different star.

 

Specifically, she's joined forces with an eccentric Briton called Hector Raynebow. Raynebow used to be an environmentalist, but he's rejected all that on the grounds that humanity, in its present form, is incapable of saving the world: it is too self-centred, short-sighted, and fractious.

Don't worry, though, he has the perfect solution: Humankind 2.0, an exponential advance on homo sapiens, developed via cutting-edge gene technology. His "new humans" will, of course, be intelligent and rational enough to act with the necessary altruism.

Yet more than a few governments don't hear the words, "new humans"; they hear "super-soldiers". And the question is, assuming Raynebow really is capable of developing such things, who is going to get their hands on them first?

John Mordred is assigned to investigate. Once he's two thousand miles from home, and hemmed in by hostile forces, guess who turns up to help? Yes, it's Chasha Jones.
 

"James Ward brings protagonist John Mordred alive on the page … The author displays exceptional ability when it comes to storytelling." – Emerald Book Review.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940164496869
Publisher: Cool Millennium
Publication date: 09/22/2020
Series: Tales of MI7
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 443 KB

About the Author

James Ward is the author of the Tales of MI7 series, as well as two volumes of poetry, a couple of philosophical works, some general fiction and a collection of ghost stories. His awards include the Oxford University Humanities Research Centre Philosophical Dialogues Prize, The Eire Writer’s Club Short Story Award, and the ‘Staffroom Monologue’ Award. His stories and essays have appeared in Falmer, Dark Tales and Comparative Criticism. He has an MA and a DPhil, both in Philosophy from Sussex University. He currently works as a secondary school teacher, and lives in East Sussex.

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