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Books with title Home: Interstellar:

  • Home: Interstellar:

    Ray Strong

    eBook (Impulse Fiction, Sept. 4, 2015)
    In 2177, twelve-year-old Meriel Hope solo-jumped into Procyon System with a ship full of dead people aiming straight for Enterprise Station.“Great Story! Great World Building! … engrossing and entertaining, and a plot full of twists and turns... awesome world building and character arcs…!” ***** Madhavi Ghare (Goodeads)Murdered parents and a busted spaceship, that’s what pirates left to Meriel and the orphans from LSM Princess. But pirates didn’t exist, and for the space stations, that defined her as crazy.After ten years of flashbacks, nightmares, and compulsory drugs, Meriel’s past will not stay buried. While searching for a mythical sanctuary called Home, she trips alarms that protect the killers … and the biggest secret in human history.Meriel has only days to untangle the mysteries surrounding her parents’ death or face her own. What she finds can save the far-stars from destruction, but it makes the orphans targets.Again.And this time they will not escape.“...a pilgrimage with a haunted and haunting female character who combines strength and grace in a way that instantly wins the reader over to her perspective and her values, her every cause.” -- Writer's Digest“Reminiscent of Ray Bradbury, early Heinlein, or Alan Dean Foster. Characters who are realistic, not perfect...” ***** Norma Mason (Goodreads)
  • Home: Interstellar

    Ray Strong

    Paperback (Impulse Fiction, Sept. 4, 2015)
    In 2177, twelve-year-old Meriel Hope solo-jumped into Procyon System with a ship full of dead people aiming straight for Enterprise Station.“Great Story! Great World Building! … engrossing and entertaining, and a plot full of twists and turns... awesome world building and character arcs…!” ***** Madhavi Ghare (Goodeads)Murdered parents and a busted spaceship, that’s what pirates left to Meriel and the orphans from LSM Princess. But pirates didn’t exist, and for the space stations, that defined her as crazy.After ten years of flashbacks, nightmares, and compulsory drugs, Meriel’s past will not stay buried. While searching for a mythical sanctuary called Home, she trips alarms that protect the killers … and the biggest secret in human history.Meriel has only days to untangle the mysteries surrounding her parents’ death or face her own. What she finds can save the far-stars from destruction, but it makes the orphans targets.Again.And this time they will not escape.“...a pilgrimage with a haunted and haunting female character who combines strength and grace in a way that instantly wins the reader over to her perspective and her values, her every cause.” -- Writer's Digest“Reminiscent of Ray Bradbury, early Heinlein, or Alan Dean Foster. Characters who are realistic, not perfect...” ***** Norma Mason (Goodreads)
  • Interstellar Pig

    William Sleator

    Mass Market Paperback (Puffin Books, June 1, 1995)
    When three unusually attractive young adults rent the summer cottage next door, Barney's boring vacation at the beach seemingly takes a turn for the better. However, after the neighbors unwittingly reveal their extraterrestrial identities, the board game they have taught him becomes a real-life battle, and Barney must outsmart the aliens to save Earth from destruction. The fantastical tale contains some of Sleator's most inventive characters.
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  • Interstellar Pig

    William Sleator

    eBook (, Dec. 10, 2019)
    When three unusually attractive young adults rent the summer cottage next door, Barney's boring vacation at the beach seemingly takes a turn for the better. However, after the neighbors unwittingly reveal their extraterrestrial identities, the board game they have taught him becomes a real-life battle, and Barney must outsmart the aliens to save Earth from destruction. The fantastical tale contains some of Sleator's most inventive characters.
  • Interstellar

    L.A. Sees

    language (, March 28, 2016)
    After eighteen years on the starship Omega Centauri and with the cataclysmic events of Nebula still fresh in her memory, Marie “Ree” Lindbergh has achieved a lifelong dream—to live on Earth.Ree quickly discovers Earth is very different from the old movies she loved to watch on the Omega Centauri. She’s an unwilling celebrity on the news and snubbed by her new schoolmates. Zac, her old friend and new boyfriend, moves to Australia, leaving Ree in America to deal with her own deeply fractured family. An alarming medical discovery only adds to the tension—and sheds some light on how Ree survived the brutal environment while she was held captive.As Ree begins to realize Earth isn’t at all like her dreams, she also finds herself drawn to Jonathan. A newcomer to her school—like Ree herself—Jonathan seems perfect. He’s cute, creative, and unlike Zac, devoted to equality between humans and the often-oppressed Bufoanthroids. He’s also harboring a life-altering secret. The second installment in L.A. Sees’s The Nebula Trilogy, Interstellar continues to explore Ree Lindbergh’s impact on the strained relationship between earthborn humans, Bufoanthroids, and an uncertain future.
  • Interstellar Pig

    William Sleator

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, June 1, 1995)
    Barney's boring seaside vacation suddenly becomes more interesting when the cottage next door is occupied by three exotic neighbors who are addicted to a game they call Interstellar Pig
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  • Interstellar Pig

    William Sleator

    Paperback (Puffin, June 1, 1994)
    None
  • Interstellar

    L. A. Sees

    Paperback (Centauri Publishing Group, Feb. 25, 2016)
    After eighteen years on the starship Omega Centauri and with the cataclysmic events of Nebula still fresh in her memory, Marie “Ree” Lindbergh has achieved a lifelong dream—to live on Earth. Ree quickly discovers Earth is very different from the old movies she loved to watch on the Omega Centauri. She’s an unwilling celebrity on the news and snubbed by her new schoolmates. Zac, her old friend and new boyfriend, moves to Australia, leaving Ree in America to deal with her own deeply fractured family. An alarming medical discovery only adds to the tension—and sheds some light on how Ree survived the brutal environment while she was held captive. As Ree begins to realize Earth isn’t at all like her dreams, she also finds herself drawn to Jonathan. A newcomer to her school—like Ree herself—Jonathan seems perfect. He’s cute, creative, and unlike Zac, devoted to equality between humans and the often-oppressed Bufoanthroids. He’s also harboring a life-altering secret. The second installment in L.A. Sees’s The Nebula Trilogy, Interstellar continues to explore Ree Lindbergh’s impact on the strained relationship between earthborn humans, Bufoanthroids, and an uncertain future.
  • Interstellar Pig

    William Sleator

    Hardcover (Dutton, June 11, 1984)
    A teenager becomes interested in a strange board game called Interstellar Pig and faces a nightmare when he discovers the game is real
  • Interstellar RV

    Adam C Richardson

    language (, Sept. 17, 2011)
    Tyler Moss thinks his life couldn’t possibly get more complicated: endless babysitting, intimidating phone calls from his mother’s abusive ex-boyfriend, and a school bully that’s preparing to make Tyler his next punching bag. But when Tyler and his trouble-making friend “Banzai” discover a mysterious RV in the local junkyard, they find themselves facing complications of cosmic proportions: an extraterrestrial chef that bakes up havoc all across town, a disoriented princess who demands all of Tyler’s time (and potato chips), and the relentless space criminal who’s hunting them all down. Not only will Tyler need to learn to trust himself if he’s going to save the princess and his family, he’s going to have to unravel a mystery that has haunted his town for nearly 15 years.
  • Interstellar Pig

    William Sleator

    Paperback (Puffin, June 1, 1995)
    When three unusually attractive young adults rent the summer cottage next door, Barney's boring vacation at the beach seemingly takes a turn for the better. However, after the neighbors unwittingly reveal their extraterrestrial identities, the board game they have taught him becomes a real-life battle, and Barney must outsmart the aliens to save Earth from destruction. The fantastical tale contains some of Sleator's most inventive characters.
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  • Interstellar Pig

    William Sleator

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, June 1, 1995)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. A teenager becomes interested in a strange board game called ""Interstellar Pig,"" the obsession of his new and unusual neighbors, and he soon stumbles into a nightmare when he discovers that the game is real.
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