The novel Space: 1972, inspired by Stephen King's style, is available for free for a limited time. The story presents an alternate scenario where John F. Kennedy was not assassinated. From that premise, the United States builds a space empire that ends up threatening temporal stability. For readers, it's an opportunity to access science fiction without spending money. Those who enjoy the genre can take advantage of this promotion now.
The narrative engine: temporal distortion and lunar colonization 🚀
The plot uses advanced technological development that combines nuclear propulsion with time curvature experiments. The space empire, under the leadership of a long-lived JFK, establishes bases on the Moon and Mars during the 1970s. The conflict arises when these interstellar journeys generate paradoxes that tear the fabric of time. The novel explores how technology, without ethical control, can turn against its creators. King influences the psychological tension of characters trapped in divergent timelines.
The space empire you couldn't see because you were watching Star Wars 🌌
While in our reality the 1970s gave us the synth of bell-bottom pants and disco, in Space: 1972 humanity was already colonizing Jupiter. Too bad the JFK of this universe didn't have to worry about Social Security waiting lists, because he was too busy undoing time. At least, if the space empire collapses, we can blame time travel and not bureaucracy. Free and with no risk of ruining your own timeline.