3.3
13 af 532
Science fiction
People remember Braun not for where he went, but for what followed him afterward. Wherever he stops, questions rise, suspicions harden, and no answer is ever enough. His voyage pushed human exploration beyond familiar boundaries, but what truly unsettles those who listen is not how far he traveled—it is how profoundly that journey altered the meaning of return. This story unfolds through tense conversations, quiet confrontations, and moments of raw emotional exposure, revealing how curiosity, ambition, and loss collide when the universe refuses to behave as expected.
At its heart, this is a story about isolation and consequence. The farther Braun recounts his experience, the more fragile certainty becomes. Space is no longer just distance, but something reflective, distorted, and indifferent to human intention. What remains is not triumph, but ambiguity—an unsettling reminder that discovery does not guarantee understanding, and that some frontiers may leave those who cross them permanently displaced from ordinary life.
Stanley Mullen was known for blending speculative science with psychological depth, often focusing on the human cost of exploration rather than its spectacle. His stories frequently examined how ordinary individuals respond when confronted with forces that defy explanation. In this tale, Mullen delivers one of his most enduring themes: that the greatest mysteries of space are not always found among the stars, but within the people who dare to go looking.
© 2021 Scott Miller (Lydbog): 9781669638094
Udgivelsesdato
Lydbog: 24. december 2021