book cover of Star Blaster
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Star Blaster

(2022)
A novel by

 
 
Hero.
Criminal.
Son.
Badass.

One thousand years from now, the human race has spread out and conquered galaxies far and wide. For all our achievements our biggest failure is the forgotten path back to planet Earth. Some want to find the lost planet to preserve our culture, others want it for its natural resources, but for war-hero-turned-outlaw, Axel Black, Earth is the home to his long-lost father.

After being arrested for a heist, ultimate lone wolf Axel Black is offered a full pardon if he retrieves the last known map back to Earth. Easy. Or it would be if the map wasn’t located on the surface of a planet that’s about to implode.

He has twenty-four-hours, a blaster on his hip and a seriously bad attitude. Will that be enough to find the map and discover the secrets to his childhood before the way back to Earth is lost forever?

Star Blaster is classic Jack Quaid! Full of excitement, fun, action and with all the boring bits cut out. For fans of Escape from New York and Battlestar Galactica with a dash of Star Warsthrown in.

About the author:
Between the years 1980 and 1999, American novelist JACK QUAID produced a series of fun and wild stories where anything could happen, and with Quaid behind the typewriter, they usually did. He called these books his Electric Mayhem series.

Jack Quaid was born in West Hollywood, California, in 1953. He won a scholarship to UCLA but dropped out after six months to “learn how to write.” Two years later, he sold his first short story to Startling Mystery Magazine, but it was the publication of his novel The City on the Edge of Tomorrow in 1980 and the film adaptation starring Bruce Dern that set him on his way.

Fearing his initial success would fade, Quaid wrote obsessively for the next two decades and published under many pseudonyms. It’s unknown just how many books he produced during this period, but despite the name on the jacket, savvy readers always knew they were reading a Jack Quaid novel within the first few pages.

His books have long been out of print, and they now live on the dusty shelves of secondhand bookstores and in the memories of those who have been lucky enough to read them.

Quaid’s current whereabouts are unknown.

About the illustrator:
BUTCHER BILLY takes what is considered pop culture from a variety of sources—music, movies, comics, games, books etc—and mashes them all together to come up with something that draws on nostalgia, while, at the same time, provides the audience with a fresh take on a familiar scene. He’s not even going to apologize. It’s that sort of rule-breaking, devil may care, chaotic attitude that inspires Billy's art.


Genre: Science Fiction

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