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Cover of The Object: Hard Science Fiction

The Object: Hard Science Fiction

Joshua T. Calvert ()

Subgenre
Age groupAdult 18+
Content ratingPG
Pages (Standard (250-400))
Setting
CSM age13

Content levels

ViolenceNone
Sexual contentNone
LanguageNone

Trigger warnings

Rejection

Heroine archetypes

Scientist / Researcher

Protagonist archetypes

Outcast / LonerReluctant Hero

Synopsis

The international bestseller from USA Today bestselling author Joshua T. Calvert! Deep space holds secrets… …and one astronomer for NASA has found a big one. But it’s not what she thinks. Dr. Melody Adams, a physicist at the Gemini North Observatory, was studying Pluto in the telescope data and it struck her as odd. The numbers didn’t make sense. Could there be an extraterrestrial object in our solar system? She followed protocol. The scientific community didn’t believe her. And before she knew what happened, her career was over. The day that changed Melody’s life was like any other over the previous two years. She’d found she had a gift for writing and her career as an author had almost healed the pain of losing her job. When the Secret Service rang her bell, everything changed. Something was nearing Saturn… …and it was slowing down. Had she been right about the object? You’ll love this hard science fiction novel because Melody is about to find out that everything she knew about space and time was wrong. Get it now.

Tags

MysteryTechno-ThrillerContact Story

Is The Object: Hard Science Fiction appropriate for my child?

Suitable for most readers 13 and up.

A hard science fiction novel about a disgraced astronomer who discovers an extraterrestrial object approaching Saturn. Content focuses on scientific investigation and career vindication with no violence, sexual content, or strong language.

What to know going in

This book has no graphic violence, no sexual content, and clean language. Content notes include rejection.

Publisher age: Adult·Our content rating: 13+

Publisher ages reflect reading level; our rating reflects content maturity — they can differ.

Who'll love this

Teens will enjoy the mystery of discovering what the mysterious object near Saturn really is and watching the protagonist prove her skeptics wrong.