Books tagged: synthetic

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Found: 5 results

Woman of Glass    by Stephen Cote
Price: Free! 3980 words. Published on October 30, 2011. .

Julian scratches metal flamenco in a dive where humans and synthetics intermix. A man invites him to play a song for his disabled neighbor. Although he plays he is uncomfortable around her and never sees Lee again. Lee, on the other hand, has her own ideas.
Literacy in Plastics Technology    by John Skull
Price: $1.99 USD. 6160 words. Published on May 13, 2012. .

This book is one of the six books in our Literacy series. It offers groundwork material on the vast and complex subject of plastics. Plastics have impacted substantially on all our lives during the past hundred years or so. For instance, they have developed into the third-largest manufactory industry in the U.S.A. There would be few, if any , homes and businesses that do not use plastics.
Living Naturally    by Loreen Doherty
Price: $6.99 USD. 43540 words. Published on June 13, 2012. .

Have you ever wanted to LIVE, feel and look better NATURALLY while saving your hard-earned money? Since the early 1900’s over 75,000 synthetic, toxic chemicals have been introduced into our environment and homes. This 170 page book will give you inexpensive, effective tips, methods and step-by-step, easy-to-follow recipes using natural, chemical-free, healthy alternatives to damaging synthetics.
System Purge: Book 1 of Digital Evolution    by Ross Willard
Price: $2.99 USD. 92360 words. Published on January 1, 2013. .

A 14-year-old prodigy with a mysterious past. A genetically-engineered soldier with a deadly present. A sentient machine fighting for his future. They come from different worlds, but they'll have to trust each other if they want to survive.
Plastic Tulips    by Brian Wheeler
Price: $0.99 USD. 12050 words. Published on March 11, 2013. .

The town of Portis doesn't fault Sophie Carter for gunning down Samantha Tosh in the local grocery store. Knowing that a copy of a younger, more beautiful you walked the streets around your home would drive anyone to murder. Nor was Samantha a person. She was only a synthetic, and Franklin Tosh should've known better than to think a clone could substitute for a human wife.