The Gender Divide, Septmeber 2007, David Boultbee Ryan Peters is one of a very few men who live as long as
women, the result of a secret experiment by a man determined to change the
world. That man had prepared for the dangerous consequences his work would
inevitably provoke and safely hid his formula before his mysterious death.
Now Ryan, as one of the subjects of the experiment, is the only one who can find
the formula, and his secret "handlers" hired him to do that and helped him to
acquire forty years of training in the military to achieve that goal. I did not enjoy The Gender Divide as much as I would have
liked, but overall it's a fairly good book. The overuse of adverbs slows
the pace a bit, I think, and therefore it probably should have been edited
better, but doesn't reallty spoil the experience. If not for this and the
slow progression, I might haved like it a lot more. I give The Gender
Divide 3.5 stars.
Next: The Lyre of Tul-Banoth
by Wesley Lambert
A Review of The Gender Divide by David
Boultbee
Shadowmere
Publishing
ISBN 978-1-890785-12-3
Reviewer: Michael Southard
The Gender Divide
is a thoughtful science-fiction story set in a future world where women live
three or four times longer than men and are the dominant force in society.
Although plot progression is slow, the characters are well done and the science
relating to nanite augmentation is well-detailed and deeply interesting.
In fact, alongside the political turmoil reaching its burtsing point, Boultbee's
descriptions of nanite augmentation was part of what kept me reading the
story.
(Starting with this review, I will be using a
rating system from now on. The ratings will be defined in this manner: 1
star=terrible, 2=fair, 3=good, 4=very good, and 5=excellent).![]()