Stephanie Saulter writes what she likes to think is literary science fiction. Born in Jamaica, she studied at MIT and spent fifteen years in the USA before moving to the UK in 2003. In 2010 she launched the Scriptopus interactive website for writing short fiction. Stephanie blogs unpredictably at stephaniesaulter.com and tweets slightly more reliably as @scriptopus. She lives in London.
"Regeneration - the whole series, really - is something best
explored for yourself. It's the kind of future that makes you think
twice about the things you thought you knew, changes how you look
at the world around you, and does so in a way that's phenomenally
entertaining and brilliant. The characters are wonderful, the story
is compelling, the pacing and development smooth and fascinating;
it all comes together as a rich tapestry that draws you in and
doesn't let you go easily. The (R)Evolution series has left its
mark, and its influence will be felt for years to
come."--Bibliotropic
"fantastic finale to one of the best SF series of the past five
years"--A Fantastical Librarian
"if smart, diverse and socially aware science fiction is something
you're hungry for, you should definitely be reading her work"--Over
the Effing Rainbow
"I've said once before that the (R)evolution novels are important,
and with the series now complete, I stand by that assertion.
Regeneration brings the story of the Gems, of Zavcka Klist, of
Aryel Morningstar and of Eli Walker to a conclusion that resonates,
and like its title, regenerates. For all of the troubles and
challenges that her characters face, and what she throws at the
world, the note of hope that comes through the two previous books
is amplified in its conclusion. The world never can go back to the
way it was, and you wouldn't really want it to if you could. All
you can do is to go forward and build a better world with the tools
you built yesterday and today. That is as true of our modern world
as the future that Saulter posits, and Saulter's future is, in the
end, a mirror on our own world, a hopeful one. The (R)evolution
Trilogy takes that philosophy and brings it to wonderful life."--SF
Signal
"Like all the best science fiction, the (R)Evolution series uses
its speculative construct to examine aspects of modern life, in
this case tolerance and the benefits of
multiculturalism."--GeekDad
"The story's quite interesting and flowed nicely. There were a good
number of unexpected twists. . .I was particularly impressed with
the last chapter that really rapped up the trilogy well. This is a
brilliant series, highly recommended."--SciFi Fan Letter
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