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The Wanderers on Earth (Mission From Venus Trilogy Book 2) Kindle Edition
For fans of Rebecca Yarros, Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Marion Zimmer Bradley, a new fantasy trilogy that takes the reader on an adventurous journey of discovery into other worlds, time travel, esoteric philosophies, intuitive healing and Jungian psychology.
Book Two opens with Soonam, whose human name is Rose, in the Bellevue psychiatric ward. When the police found her dancing in the fountain in Washington Square Park, she'd insisted on introducing them to the violet-eyed man she lived with on Venus. The police saw no man. Things weren't any easier for the other wanderers. Attivio, whose human name was Ephraim, in a near drowning incident off the coast of Corfu had also slipped the bounds of rational thought and found himself under a pink-gold sky walking toward a pearl temple where a man in a long purple robe wearing a star tetrahedron pendant gestured to him. Next to the man was a violet-eyed girl who he was sure he knew.
Meanwhile across the world in Mumbai, Bereh, (human name Arjuna), while recovering from a near fatal car crash was visited by a light being holding an Emerald Healing Ray. And Ederah, (human name Natasha), was being put to bed in Moscow by her mother after a near fatal ice-skating accident. Natasha recounted to her mother how a pink light being had rescued her after Darpith had caused the six-inch-thick ice to melt so that she fell through into the icy water.
Over in America, on the coldest night of the year, two other wanderers in their group, Maepleida (Mary, London) and Heipleido (Horus, Cairo) were working to restore power in the Mid-West. The Dark Lord Veldemiron had helped Putin to breach the grid and gas lines creating an arctic blast in Montana, the Dakotas and Wyoming, plunging hundreds of thousands of Americans into forty below temperatures.
Then things get even worse when the most evil of the Dark Lords captures a Wanderer unawares, before she can shapeshift into her fifth dimensional body. To test her power and take her to the Dark Side he inflicts pain almost beyond all endurance. Book Two ends with a visit to Avalon to see the Goddess. The fate of both wanderers and humans is uncertain.
Book One: Mission from Venus
Book Two: The Wanderers on Earth
Book Three: Immortal Beings (2025)
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCosmic Egg Books
- Publication dateDecember 11, 2020
- File size603 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
'Susan Plunket is not merely a creator of worlds, she is a creator of a multi-dimensional matrix. In 'Mission from Venus', she eloquently and convincingly proposes a deeper, highly plausible, meaning to life and love on many levels, with the back-drop being the potential destruction of Earth. I wonder how much truth there actually is in Plunket's thought-provoking, and thoroughly enjoyable, story of fiction that weaves together the spiritual and the physical. Engaging, imaginative and brimming with esoteric knowledge.'
'On the face of it, 'The Wanderers on Earth' is a story about good versus evil - a battle between evil forces and light beings from a higher dimension. But Susan Plunket has written a much deeper story, which is the sequel to 'Mission from Venus'. With goose-bumps galore, 'The Wanderers on Earth' is a thought-provoking story that says so much about the times we live in. Clever, insightful, creative, but above all hopeful.'
Reviewed by Heart & Soul
From the Back Cover
Matt Frend, author, The Free World
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B08LXWTCR6
- Publisher : Cosmic Egg Books (December 11, 2020)
- Publication date : December 11, 2020
- Language : English
- File size : 603 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 336 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #903,015 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1,970 in Metaphysical Fantasy eBooks
- #5,393 in First Contact Science Fiction (Books)
- #5,482 in First Contact Science Fiction eBooks
- Customer Reviews:
About the author
Susan Plunket is an author and psychologist. She received her doctorate at The New School for Social Research in 1989 and has a private practice in New York City. Her favorite part of her work is interpreting dreams using a Jungian approach. She writes psychological, spiritual and paranormal books.
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Top reviews from the United States
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Another thing that I liked about this book is how beings called wanderers come from all over the universe to help humans wake up and realize how powerful they are, that in fact they’re Divine, they’re the creators of their reality and they can make a heaven on Earth. It is an auspicious time for Earth as she moves into the Fourth Dimension which is why so many wanderers and twin flame pairs have incarnated here now to help humans make the leap with Earth. This story doesn’t feel like fantasy fiction. It feels like it’s what’s really happening on the planet right now.
The last thing I’ll say is that I enjoyed the writer’s style. It’s very visual and at times even poetic. I could easily envision the beings she described in both the Third and Fifth Dimensions. Would make a great movie for sure.
“The Wanderers on Earth” effectively blends sci-fi and spiritual fantasy, with studies on character, time, and place, as well as purpose and meaning. It also had some horror elements, which I liked, thanks to the forces of darkness led by Darpith, an antagonist who stood out in this book. (Note to the author, if you’re reading this: Let’s see a whole novel devoted to Darpith, his backstory, etc.)
I especially enjoyed the author’s willingness to globetrot, taking us, through the eyes of her characters, from New York and Moscow to Tehran and Mumbai and elsewhere … and, of course, to otherworldly dimensions, thanks to the “wanderers” referenced in the book’s title. So cool. She has a gift for immersing the reader into each scene, each culture. I imagine she has traveled widely, or perhaps she just has a very good imagination. She even handles the love scenes well, which I find a lot of sci-fi/fantasy writers struggle with.
Some of the themes Plunket covers in this book introduced me to concepts I didn’t know much about, apart from the lengthy pre-pandemic Q&A sessions I had with a friend who considers herself a “light worker,” of sorts. Though it’s a work of fiction, I could envision where the author was taking us. In other words, Plunket’s research and genuine interest in the subject matter come across on the page.
I’ll end with a word on Plunket’s writing style: quick, colorful, vivid—overall, a joy to read. After turning the last page, I had a lot of questions—not about the book, per se, but about issues such as what is reality, why are we here, and what is coincidence? That, I think, is the mark of a good story.
Top reviews from other countries
Despite all the Big Issues that the book tackles, the prose is fast-moving and there are plenty of set-pieces to prevent the story from ever becoming weighed down. The scene where (spoiler) two of the wanderers prevent a plane from crashing is the pick of the bunch for me. Of the 8 primary wanderers, I'd say I empathised most with Horus, the star footballer (the description of the injury to his leg at the World Cup left me wincing).
A brief note on Fifth Dimension: the game reminded me very much of the VR video game in the Three-Body Problem, with the different players coming together to act out real-(off)-world events without initially realising the purpose. Unlike in Three-Body, though, which uses its game as an exposition dump, Fifth Dimension was embedded naturally into the story and came with a payoff when the 8 started to team up in different constellations and work out who and what they were.
It feels like the author spent a lot of time in all of the places covered in the novel: Tokyo, Moscow, London, Mumbai, New York, etc. It's the little details that bring these places to life and give them a sense of vitality - definitely welcome given that I haven't gone more than 5 kms beyond my door since last August.
All in all: a ray of light for a dreary January.