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How to Lose a Planet: The Afrofuture Epic
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How to Lose a Planet: The Afrofuture Epic in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $19.99

Barnes and Noble
How to Lose a Planet: The Afrofuture Epic in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $19.99
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Size: Paperback
Kato Washington has been freed from prison and tries to rebuild his life on a foundation of regret. But a police officer and a journalist believe Kato's parole was actually a jailbreak. And a telekinetic serial killer is quietly wreaking havoc on the moons, where humans have rebuilt society after losing Earth. The police and journalist are closing in. And the killer has a special interest in Kato. On two sides, he faces disaster that rivals the loss of a planet, which is to lose everything.
How to Lose a Planet
is a 100,000-word speculative fiction story with a diverse cast of characters. The story was written with an appreciation for NK Jemisin's detailed world-building, Octavia Butler's philosophy on a clear and accessible storytelling voice, and Nalo Hopkinson's attention to the effect of culture on dialogue.
How to Lose a Planet
is a 100,000-word speculative fiction story with a diverse cast of characters. The story was written with an appreciation for NK Jemisin's detailed world-building, Octavia Butler's philosophy on a clear and accessible storytelling voice, and Nalo Hopkinson's attention to the effect of culture on dialogue.
Kato Washington has been freed from prison and tries to rebuild his life on a foundation of regret. But a police officer and a journalist believe Kato's parole was actually a jailbreak. And a telekinetic serial killer is quietly wreaking havoc on the moons, where humans have rebuilt society after losing Earth. The police and journalist are closing in. And the killer has a special interest in Kato. On two sides, he faces disaster that rivals the loss of a planet, which is to lose everything.
How to Lose a Planet
is a 100,000-word speculative fiction story with a diverse cast of characters. The story was written with an appreciation for NK Jemisin's detailed world-building, Octavia Butler's philosophy on a clear and accessible storytelling voice, and Nalo Hopkinson's attention to the effect of culture on dialogue.
How to Lose a Planet
is a 100,000-word speculative fiction story with a diverse cast of characters. The story was written with an appreciation for NK Jemisin's detailed world-building, Octavia Butler's philosophy on a clear and accessible storytelling voice, and Nalo Hopkinson's attention to the effect of culture on dialogue.

















