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The Boy Who Would Live Forever: A Novel of Gateway (Tor Books, 2004), which incorporated three previously published stories: [3] "The Boy Who Would Live Forever" (split into "From Istanbul to the Stars" and "In the Steps of Heroes"), Far Horizons , ed. Robert Silverberg ( Avon Books , May 1999), pp. 295–342
Don O'Briant, books editor for The Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Constitution, said the book was an "exciting adventure" and noted it in his roundup of the year's best books. [ 5 ] Future Bond author Raymond Benson said "This is far and away John Gardner's best James Bond novel, and it is precisely because it is such a personal plot for the ...
Ways to Live Forever is a 2008 children's novel by Sally Nicholls, first published in 2008.The author's debut novel, it was written when Nicholls was 23 years old. [1]It won the 2008 Waterstone's Children's Book Prize, 2008 Glen Dimplex (Irish) New Writers Award, 2008 German Luchs des Jahres and 2009 Bristol-based Concorde Children's Book Award. [2]
To Live Forever is a science fiction novel by American writer Jack Vance, first published in 1956. In the Vance Integral Edition, it was retitled Clarges.
Critical reception to The Truth About Forever has been positive, [1] [2] with The Celebrity Cafe giving the book 4.5 stars [3] and the Star Telegram calling it "eternally inspiring". [4] Publishers Weekly and Teen Ink also praised the book, [5] with Teen Ink writing that it was a "must read" for summer reading lists. [6]
Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever (Rodale Books, ISBN 1-57954-954-3) is a book authored by Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman published in 2004. The basic premise of the book is that if middle aged people can live long enough, until approximately 120 years, they will be able to live forever—as humanity overcomes all diseases and old age itself.
Seven countries, an ocean and over a thousand miles stand between them and their dreams for a future.
The American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom started tracking the most banned and challenged books in the United States in the 1990s and found that Forever... landed in the top 100 banned and challenged books from 1990-1999 (7th), [9] as well as from 2000-2009 (16th). [10]