user73191936's Reading List
6 stories
Welcome to Mars by triciabird
Welcome to Mars
triciabird
  • Reads 4,021
  • Votes 243
  • Parts 2
Coming Soon
Lost Empire by Pars01
Lost Empire
Pars01
  • Reads 255,845
  • Votes 20,219
  • Parts 100
A man with a past, not tied to anyone makes a startling discovery that changes his life and his perceptions of it. Being alone Derrick found it calming, then he had a dream, or was it?
Alien Isolation: Sevastopol Invaded by WildXenomorph
Alien Isolation: Sevastopol Invaded
WildXenomorph
  • Reads 7,867
  • Votes 282
  • Parts 23
Sevastopol sits in the depths of isolated space, far away from any other space stations. Sevastopol was just bought out by Weyland-Yutani Corporation and was being decommissioned when an unidentified organism makes its way on board. This creature grows into a monster and goes on a savage killing spree. The Working Joe androids are going haywire, killing people and doing nothing about this threat. Jemma is a teenage girl on Sevastopol Station along with many of her friends. Will Jemma, her boyfriend, and everyone she cares about survive? Or will they go down in a bloody massacre? One thing they must remember, in space no one can hear you scream. (Taking place during the game Alien: Isolation on Sevastopol Station)
Experiment by _pure_imagination_
Experiment
_pure_imagination_
  • Reads 422,193
  • Votes 21,598
  • Parts 28
Laura had always known her parents were strange. They had a laboratory filled with strange animals, serums, experiments. But she never imagined that she would become one . . . Highest rating: #8 in Science Fiction! COMPLETED!
The Girl in the Tank: Galactic Consortium, Season 1 by RJEliason
The Girl in the Tank: Galactic Consortium, Season 1
RJEliason
  • Reads 130,845
  • Votes 14,672
  • Parts 92
Less than five months ago, lights appeared in the sky. Days later the ships started to arrive. They call themselves the Consortium. They are human, or at least Simian, descending from the same genetic line as humans. They terraformed this planet centuries ago, sent settlers a mere forty thousand years ago. Now they are back, ready to begin the exploration of this galaxy. For Cheyenne Walker, Chief Petty Officer aboard the Cambridge, a USS destroyer, the arrival of the Consortium is just one more obstacle to finishing her final tour of duty and getting home to her kids. The political upheaval forces the US into an uneasy alliance with the Consortium against China, and puts the Cambridge on the edge of a nuclear blast. Cheyenne wakes to find herself aboard the Corelean, a Consortium Medical Evacuation ship. Floating in a medi-tank, she wonders if they really can't repair the wreck of her body, whether these newcomers are friends or foes and most importantly, will she ever make it back to children?
Hacking the Sun [Old Version] by NineLight
Hacking the Sun [Old Version]
NineLight
  • Reads 30,529
  • Votes 2,120
  • Parts 51
[Highest Ranking #49 in Science Fiction] Jessica Leibniz tried being a normal teenager, but unlike most teenagers, she can tell time without a clock. She still wears a watch, but it comes with incriminating A.I. software. It's part of her fashion sense-if you call a mix of 80's nostalgia, geekism, and jagged hair a fashion sense. Otherwise, you have a normal, nineteen-year-old girl who delivers pizza and tacos by day and hacks cybersecurity networks by night. All the while, she turns heads, probably because she performs her job on a gravity board, which is relatively unorthodox in a future where aliens rule the planet. The alien takeover could have ended more violently, but there's irony in how efficient and peaceful Earth has become a hundred years later. Corporations still reign supreme, but aliens lie at the top of the social ladder. Azareans they call them, overlords who've constructed a new kind of city for the modern world. The Eden: a modern megapolis. Accustomed to life in the modern city, Jessica has learned to embrace challenge when it comes her way. Without a cause, she confides in her three friends or smacks into boredom. And when she seamlessly cracks an uncrackable corporate security algorithm, nothing makes sense. Faced with world-turning revelations, the life she's led seems trivial next to a hundred-year lie and tragedy.