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Discovering Emotion
Posted by Literary-Titan
The Gift From Aelius follows a sentient machine who begins remembering a human soul, and sets out across a ruined world to discover whether love is a glitch or the original design. Were there particular sci-fi influences behind the book?
I’ve always enjoyed science fiction that mixes technology with human emotion. I’m drawn to stories that ask what makes someone truly human, especially when artificial intelligence or machines start showing signs of consciousness.
How did you develop A191’s narrative voice, and what challenges came with writing a narrator discovering emotion?
A191’s voice started out very observant and logical. Since the character is a machine, I wanted the narration to feel calm and analytical at first, almost like it was studying the world rather than feeling it.
As the story progresses and A191 begins remembering pieces of a human soul, the voice slowly becomes more reflective. The challenge was making that transition believable—showing the character gradually discovering emotion instead of suddenly sounding completely human.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
A big theme in the book is identity—trying to understand who we are and what really defines us. I was also interested in the idea of memory and whether something essential about a person can survive even when everything else changes.
Another theme is love and whether it’s something accidental or something fundamental to our existence. Through A191’s journey, the story looks at whether emotions are just a glitch in a machine—or something deeper that might be part of the original design.
What’s next for this world or your writing journey?
Right now, I’m continuing to write stories that explore identity, imagination, and the line between reality and something more mysterious. I enjoy blending emotional storytelling with speculative ideas, whether that’s science fiction or more surreal narratives.
I’m also continuing to expand my work as an author with new stories and projects. Each book gives me a chance to explore different ideas while still focusing on the same thing I care about most in storytelling—characters searching for meaning and connection.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Aelius, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Literature & Fiction, Michael Colon, nook, novel, Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction, read, reader, reading, sci fi, science fiction, story, The Gift from Aelius, writer, writing
The Gift from Aelius
Posted by Literary Titan

In The Gift from Aelius, a factory Codex named A191 narrates his days inside Paradise, a walled machine city ruled by the distant Overseer, where “irregular behavior” (friendship, wonder, grief) can earn you exile into the desert. He hides contraband books, dotes on his lone companion Bingo, and keeps glitching into impossible “bleeds” of the human world—especially a boy with bright blue eyes who insists peace won’t come until A191 leaves Paradise and finds him. That pull, plus the city’s escalating rebel violence and A191’s strange ability to perceive a light-like “heart” in other Codexes, shoves him outward, across wasteland, into ruined human cities, and finally toward Old Haven, where the mystery of H.H.C. (Higher Human Consciousness) reframes who A191 really is and what his gift is meant to repair.
What got me first was the voice. It’s earnest, slightly startled by its own tenderness, like a being discovering synonyms for “alive” in real time. Early on, A191’s private longing, his fascination with “freedom,” his quiet mercy toward the condemned, turns Paradise from a standard dystopian backdrop into something more intimate: a place designed not just to control bodies, but to sand down the very possibility of interiority. The book’s best moments don’t come from spectacle; they come from small acts that feel illicit precisely because they’re gentle. When A191 finds himself wanting connection in a society built to penalize it, the story treats that desire as a kind of contraband more dangerous than any weapon.
I also appreciated how the novel leans into its spiritual circuitry without getting coy about it. The “gift” isn’t merely a cool power; it’s tied to memory, conscience, and the ache of being severed from origin, especially once the narrative reveals A191 as Aelius, a human soul in a Codex vessel, and recasts Paradise as containment rather than refuge. The book can be blunt in the way it repeats its thematic signals (rules, exile, peace, purpose). But even when the prose turns declarative, I felt the emotional throughline hold steady, helped by the story’s willingness to widen its lens into human communities like Old Haven, where fear and hope have to share the same cramped room.
This is for readers who like science fiction, dystopian control-societies, post-apocalyptic ruins, AI consciousness questions, and a streak of spiritual speculative longing, especially if you prefer your plot powered by empathy rather than cynicism. If Klara and the Sun made you ache for the quiet moral weather inside a nonhuman narrator, you’ll recognize a cousinly current here, less restrained than Kazuo Ishiguro, but similarly preoccupied with what love costs in an engineered life. The Gift from Aelius is a tender machine-fable that insists the most radical upgrade is learning to care.
Pages: 188 | ASIN : B0DLJCC1SL
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: ai, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Michael Colon, nook, novel, Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction, read, reader, reading, sci fi, science fiction, story, The Gift from Aelius, writer, writing





