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The Infinite Miles

By: Hannah Fergesen
Narrated by: Sarah Beth Goer
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Summary

Fans of Claudia Gray and Kelly Link will love Hannah Fergesen’s wild and poignant debut—a wacky time-traveling sci-fi odyssey wrapped in an elegiac ode to lost friendship and a clever homage to Doctor Who.

To save the future, she must return to the beginning.

Three years after her best friend Peggy went missing, Harper Starling is lost. Lost in her dead-end job, lost in her grief. All she has are regrets and reruns of her favorite science fiction show, Infinite Odyssey.

Then Peggy returns and demands to be taken to the Argonaut, the fictional main character of Infinite Odyssey. But the Argonaut is just that … fictional. Until the TV hero himself appears and spirits Harper away from her former best friend. Traveling through time, he explains that Peggy used to travel with him but is now under the thrall of an alien enemy known as the Incarnate—one that has destroyed countless solar systems.

Then he leaves Harper in 1971.

Stranded in the past, Harper must find a way to end the Incarnate’s thrall … without the help of the Argonaut. But the cosmos are nothing like the technicolor stars of the TV show she loves, and if Harper can’t find it in herself to believe—in the Argonaut, in Peggy, and most of all, in herself—she’ll be the Incarnate’s next casualty, along with the rest of the universe.

©2023 Hannah Fergesen (P)2023 Blackstone Publishing

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A little too familiar to stand apart

The Infinite Miles is difficult to describe without sounding hard on it, but it's basically Doctor Who fan fiction with the main character finding out that the TV show they loved is actually real and the disappearance of her friend is related to the Argonaut (i.e. the Doctor). It's written well enough and an easy listen, but just lacking something. It does keep the characters and relationships at it's heart, but ultimately it just felt like it was too familiar to really stand apart.

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Good premise. Hateful woke agenda

I love doctor who and the premise for this sounded fun but the main character is super angry and hateful the whole time and complains constantly it seems about a certain race and gender that is so mean spirited and hateful I couldn’t get through more than a few hours. After 4 hours I’m sure there has been 4 rants about that certain demographic

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