Description

From Xeric grant-awarded and Ignatz Award-nominated writer Craig Hurd-McKenney and acclaimed illustrator Noah Bailey (Double Walker, Wonder Woman: Black and Gold) comes a gripping sci-fi novella about the darkness that lurks beyond Earth’s orbit… Dr. Michael Kinney is light years from Earth, overseeing the terraformation of Venus. Michael is all alone, save for the computer who keeps him company during the 272 day-long orbit from night to day around the sun. And during this time, there is no contact with Mission Control. With his circadian rhythms disrupted by his extended stay in deep space, his insomnia peaks. Reality as he knows it comes into question. As Michael struggles to finish his mission, what he thinks he knows will collide with the existential mysteries of the universe: Who am I? Why am I here? Am I alone? Why is this happening to me?

About the author(s)

Craig Hurd-McKenney is a Xeric grant-awarded and Ignatz Award-nominated writer. He lives in Seattle with his husband and four rescue dogs. Online, he lives at hspcomix.com.

 

Noah Bailey is an illustrator and cartoonist from the Midwest, best known for the Dark Horse Comics/Comixology Originals graphic novels Tremor Dose and Double Walker (written by Michael W. Conrad), Wonder Woman: Black and Gold, and Diabolical!, his comix anthology magazine with Strangers Publishing.

Reviews

“Craig explores the effect that isolation and sleep deprivation has on a sole astronaut on a space station. With only his computer’s voice for companionship. Supported by Noah’s artwork, Station Grand delves into the human psyche and all that can affect it.”

“Insomnia can be difficult to endure in itself, but what happens when you can't sleep in the far reaches of deep space and your only companion is a computer and your unraveling psyche? That intriguing (and horrifying) question is explored in stunning visual style within the pages of Station Grand.”

"Claustrophobic and creepy, [Station Grand] is an effective psychological horror story with satisfying scares."

“A gripping sci-fi novella about the darkness that lurks beyond Earth’s orbit.”

 

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