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The Data Collectors Trilogy

Complete Series

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The Data Collectors Trilogy

By: Danielle Palli
Narrated by: Graham Mack, Danielle Palli
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About this listen

Lucene Jones has a secret. Except, even she doesn’t know what it is. Working as an assistant to the priestess Reverend Isabella in a small spiritual temple in Florida, and renting a room from her best friend, Fatima, her world is upended when a mysterious stranger shows up one late afternoon in the middle of a storm. Following his arrival, memories from her past, ones she had buried long ago, begin to resurface.

Meanwhile, news reports speculate that aliens might already be among us, collecting data on all areas of human life. Unknown to the general population, however, is that the Data Collectors are trying to determine what is causing Earth’s near extinction and save the human species. However, beings from neighboring planets would rather see humans die off sooner rather than later. After all, if they can preserve what natural resources we have left, Earth becomes prime intergalactic real estate.

The Data Collectors trilogy is a journey from Earth to earthlike worlds, where a battle between the Peace-Keepers, the destructive Royals and the opportunistic Vitruvians ensues. Lucence must join forces with some unlikely allies, such as Cepheus, a lizard-like Peace-Keeper with psychotic, traumatic-laden episodes, her well-meaning but hermit-like neighbor, Ivan (“the tinkerer”), and Tanager, a professor of TARA, an academy on planet Erde specializing in helping students develop empathic powers. This is a classic tale of good versus evil, with a political space opera twist filled will lots of gray area.

©2020, 2021, 2023 Danielle Hope Hier-Palli (P)2023 Danielle Hope Hier-Palli
Genetic Engineering Science Fiction Space Opera Fiction Solar System
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The story seems pretty good however the narration is poor. Female voices are narrated by the author and seem to have been sent over from America in sound clips to be slotted into the UK narration. it doesn't work well in the first book but improves slightly in the second. Apologies to the narrator but rhythm and the different voices are poor and sound like someone on the radio in the 1950s. if it wasn't for the fact that I'd spent a credit on it I probably wouldn't have got as far as I have.

poor narration

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