Story cover for The Transub, Book 1: Proxima by Xaviertherg
The Transub, Book 1: Proxima
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    Reads 836
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  • WpHistory
    Time 6h 1m
  • WpView
    Reads 836
  • WpVote
    Votes 163
  • WpPart
    Parts 15
  • WpHistory
    Time 6h 1m
Ongoing, First published Jun 26, 2019
After building a neural-mapper to help his quadriplegic professor, Stu Bigley discovers that the device has much bigger applications. As the government tries to shut down an alien site on the moon, Proximans face a choice, fight or flight. Before the space station can make a decades-long crawl to another solar system, residents need a roadmap, and a strong kick from Earth.

THE TRANSUB
Two hundred thousand years ago, the Milky Way was seeded with metal spheres filled with entangled quantum bits. The devices allowed digitized intelligence to live inside created worlds. As technological civilizations on other worlds learned how to encode intelligence, they entered these quantum portals, joining a multi-species society that lived inside. The portal makers disappeared a long time ago, and just when humankind needs it most, the system is in crisis.
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By 2422, humankind has achieved an ecotopian climate-positive future. There's zero conflict and zero waste throughout the whole world. But, when a young girl starts having mysterious visions of a walled city, it might signal the ancient return of something threatening this ideal. Can humans escape their nature, or will they return to their old patterns and behaviours? Zee, a quiet and industrious young girl, begins to have vivid dreams and visions of a walled city and a mysterious red book when she turns fifteen. She embarks on a dangerous training programme, meeting other teenagers from around the planet, navigating deep sea trenches, black holes, and a new romance whilst trying to uncover an ancient mystery surrounding quantum entanglement. Will she solve it to save her pet squid and the planet? When millions of Earth's populations left four hundred years ago seeking a new planet to colonise, it paved the way for Earth to stabilise and thrive. But what happened to those people? Why has there been no contact? Are the visions sent from the ancient humans who left planet Earth? Zee quickly learns that her newfound independence is not without its challenges. Some of which might not be from this planet.