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The trilogy was commercially and critically successful. Steven Poole, writing in The Guardian, described "Neuromancer and the two novels which followed, Count Zero (1986) and the gorgeously titled Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988)" as making up "a fertile holy trinity, a sort of Chrome Koran (the name of one of Gibson's future rock bands) of ideas inviting endless reworkings".
Orsini’s first book Autism on Acid written in 2019 was influenced by his first LSD experience which he found to be impactful and inspiring. [3] This was the inception for his Autistic Psychedelic community in 2020, which platforms various types of peer to peer resources, that focuses on the intersection of psychedelics and neurodivergence.
It is set in a dystopian world where all living creatures can hear each other's thoughts in a stream of images, words, and sounds called Noise. The series is named after a line in the first book: "The Noise is a man unfiltered, and without a filter, a man is just chaos walking." The series consists of a trilogy of novels and three short stories ...
Based on the TV series Torchwood. [177] 2009 Malcolm Decter WWW Trilogy: Robert J. Sawyer Canada: Character appears in all three books, published between 2009 and 2011. [178] 2010 Jacob Hunt House Rules: Jodi Picoult USA [179] 2010 Max Parkman Saving Max: Antoinette van Heugten USA [180] [181] 2010 Caitlin Smith Mockingbird: Kathryn Erskine USA ...
In September 2014, it was confirmed that Sony Pictures optioned film rights to The Rosie Project. [3] Simsion penned the first draft of the script and screenwriters Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber were later brought on to work on the final script, with Phil Lord and Christopher Miller set to potentially direct. [3]
Category:Series of books for (non-novel) series that need not be read sequentially as each work is stand-alone enough without prior reading in the series. Category:Novel sequences for series that are otherwise related—which are a set or series of novels which have their own title and free-standing storyline, and can thus be read independently ...
The young adult genre has gained plenty of traction in the publishing world, thanks in part to popular book adaptations like The Giver, The Maze Runner and our personal favorite, The Hunger Games.
NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity is a book by Steve Silberman that discusses autism and neurodiversity [1] from historic, scientific, and advocacy-based perspectives. Neurotribes was awarded the Samuel Johnson Prize in 2015, [2] [3] and has received wide acclaim from both the scientific and the popular press.