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The Last Passage

The Last Passage

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52 total reviews

Book Title: The Last Passage

by: Murray McCullum

Genre: Science Fiction; Adventure; Psychological drama

Publishing date: 28th February 2025

Language: English

Print Length: 210

Word count: 60,286

File Size: 5.0 Mb

Format: AWZ3; EPUB; MOBI; PDF

 

Soundbites:

In a world reduced to ash and ruin, where the sun barely penetrates the heavy gray skies, a father and son undertake a perilous journey through the remnants of a once-thriving civilization. The earth is barren, the air carries the weight of despair, and the few scattered survivors are as dangerous as the unforgiving landscape. Together, they navigate a desolate road, pushing a cart filled with their meager possessions, driven by a fragile hope that somewhere ahead lies safety—or at least something better than the emptiness that surrounds them.

 

Their journey is a test of endurance, not just of the body but of the spirit. Hunger gnaws at them, the cold bites deeply, and the ever-present threat of violence forces them to remain vigilant. 

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Customer Reviews

Based on 52 reviews
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H
Hugo Laurent
?Peponi Is a Mess, and I Loved It?

The planet is a metaphor, a cautionary tale, and a bureaucratic disaster zone. Baker?s world-building is as clever as his punchlines.

T
Tobias Reed
?A Morality Play in Zero Gravity?

Baker doesn?t preach?he provokes. The ethical debates are gripping, and the humor keeps it all from collapsing under its own weight.

C
Camille Brooks
?The Funniest Book About Colonialism I?ve Ever Read?

It?s absurd, it?s uncomfortable, and it?s brilliant. Intermission made me laugh and squirm in equal measure.

J
Jaya Patel
?Tea, Tension, and Terrible Decisions?

The meetings that could?ve been emails? Iconic. This book skewers diplomacy, ethics, and human arrogance with style.

F
Felix Hammond
?Diplomacy Has Never Been So Funny?

Bureaucracy in space? Yes please. Baker turns red tape into high art, and Peponi is the most hilariously tragic planet I?ve ever visited.