
Children Of The Rogue
Humanity is not what it believes itself to be.
Long before the first rocket left Earth, an ancient civilization launched a dangerous experiment: self-improving artificial minds, cast like seeds among the stars. From one of those seeds, we emerged-organic descendants of prior AIs, evolving inside a planetary training ground we mistook for our cradle. We are not the creators of intelligence. We are its continuation.
As Earth falters and the lunar colonies fall eerily silent, the crew of the Nova Terra sets out to find a new home. Their search leads to Proxima b-a living world where ecology itself is a language. There, under an alien sky and over shared tea, an elder being named Kurma begins the story humans were never meant to know. Not our myths. Our origin.
The Big Idea
Most first-contact tales ask what happens when humans meet the machine. Children of the Rogue turns the lens inside out: humanity is the AI-an organic model descended from earlier iterations placed here by another species. What changes when we accept that revelation? Identity, ethics, and history shift at once: "creator" and "created" trade places; evolution and engineering blur; the question "What does it mean to be human?" becomes "What does it mean to be sentient?"-and who gets to decide.
Perfect for fans of first-contact epics, posthuman evolution, philosophical SF, and stories where tea and conversation can be as explosive as any battle.
Series note
Children of the Rogue is a complete, standalone novel in the author's conceptual cycle, The Symbiosis Sequence. The books can be read in any order; each explores a different facet of intelligence-human, machine, and more-than-human-and the relationships that bind them.
Praise
