Friday, January 19, 2018

Beginning ~ with the call to prayer


Crescent in the Sky ~ by Donald Moffitt, 1989, science fiction
The call to prayer sounded from his wrist monitor, and Abdul Hamid Jones reluctantly pressed the hold button on the haft of his micromanipulator remote and set it down carefully on the laboratory bench.  With a martyr's sigh, he consulted the glowing 3-D arrow that seemed to be floating somewhere within his wrist on the little holographic display.

In a future where Islam thrives throughout the galaxy, humble cloning technician Abdul Hamid-Jones is entangled in a plot to unite the greatly dispersed faithful under one Caliph.
For one thousand years, the Great Awakening has spread the teachings of Islam to all of the far corners of the known universe.  Without a Caliph at its head, the great Muslim empire had been a disparate conglomerate of power, for no one ruler had been able to bridge the great interplanatary distances to make the requisite pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca.  Then the Emir of Mars announces his plans to undertake this most ambitious of journeys and win the prize of the Caliphate, and Mars is thrust into a frenzy of plots and intrigue.  Young scientist Abdul Hamid-Jones is not interested enough in politics to see how any of this could affect him, but he soon finds himself caught up in the web of court politics with his life at stake because of what he knows.


Would the first few lines of your book make you want to read on?  If you would like to share the first lines of a book you are reading, click on the link and visit Gilion at Rose City Reader for today's Mister Linky.

3 comments:

Katherine P said...

This sounds interesting and definitely unique. I haven't seen many science fiction type books that center around a religion.

Anne@HeadFullofBooks said...

I am a bit intrigued by the opening. I would read on, at least through the second paragraph. Ha! My Friday Quotes

Gilion at Rose City Reader said...

This book might be even more interesting now than when it came out in 1989. Thanks for sharing the opening on Book Beginnings. I don't often get time to comment, but I appreciate your participation!