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Thank you from the bottom of my heart for doing this, have a nice day.
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Best Sellers Science Fiction
You can easily Download EPUB (electronic publication) and PDF (Portable Document Format) both files of best sellers science fiction from here for Totally Free. Here are 16 files from best sellers that are popular in different fields, with a current market value of around $145. Enrich your knowledge by collecting files from Google Drive with a simple human verification. Thank you, have a nice day.

The School of Life An Emotional Education (The School of Life)
Discover everything you were never taught at school about how to lead a better life.
We spend years in school learning facts and figures but the one thing we’re never taught is how to live a fulfilled life. That’s why we need The School of Life — a real organization founded ten years ago by writer and philosopher Alain de Botton. The School of Life has one simple aim: to equip people with the tools to survive and thrive in the modern world. And the most important of these tools is emotional intelligence.
This book brings together ten years of essential and transformative research on emotional intelligence, with practical topics
Including :
- how to understand yourself
- how to master the dilemmas of relationships
- how to become more effective at work
- how to endure failure
- how to grow more serene and resilient

The Richest Man in Babylon (George S. Clason)
Beloved by millions, this timeless classic holds the key to all you desire and everything you wish to accomplish. This is the book that reveals the secret to personal wealth.
Countless readers have been helped by the famous “Babylonian parables,” hailed as the greatest of all inspirational works on the subject of thrift, financial planning, and personal wealth. In language as simple as that found in the Bible, these fascinating and informative stories set you on a sure path to prosperity and its accompanying joys.
Acclaimed as a modern-day classic, this celebrated bestseller offers an understanding of — and a solution to — your personal financial problems that will guide you through a lifetime. This is the book that holds the secrets to keeping your money — and making more.
The Richest Man in Babylon: Read it and recommend it to loved ones—and get on the road to riches.
George S. Clason was born in Louisiana, Missouri, on November 7, 1874. He attended the University of Nebraska and served in the United States Army during the Spanish- American War. Beginning a long career in publishing, he founded the Clason Map Company of Denver, Colorado, and published the first road atlas of the United States and Canada. In 1926, he issued the first of a famous series of pamphlets on thrift and financial success, using parables set in ancient Babylon to make each of his points. These were distributed in large quantities by banks and insurance companies and became familiar to millions, the most famous being “The Richest Man in Babylon,” the parable from which the present volume takes its title.

The Other Emily (Dean Koontz)
An Amazon Charts, Wall Street Journal, and USA Today bestseller.
Number one New York Times bestselling master of suspense Dean Koontz takes readers on a twisting journey of lost love, impossible second chances, and terrifying promises.
A decade ago, Emily Carlino vanished after her car broke down on a California highway. She was presumed to be one of serial killer Ronny Lee Jessup’s victims whose remains were never found.
The loss of the love of his life and the guilt over not being there to help her have both left writer David Thorne still reeling. He has since looked for resolution in any manner he can. He even pays frequent visits to Jessup in jail in an effort to learn more about Emily’s final moments so he can finally bury her body.
Then David meets Maddison Sutton, a seductive, jovial woman who is well aware of everything David has lost. But what really stops him in his tracks is how much Maddison resembles Emily, right down to her kisses. As the fantastical becomes plausible, David’s fascination intensifies, Madison’s enigmatic background becomes more clear, and horror increases.
Is she Emily? Or an irresistible dead ringer? Either way, the ultimate question is the same: What game is she playing? Whatever the risk in finding out, David’s willing to take it for this precious second chance. It’s been ten years since he’s felt this inspired, this hopeful, this much in love…and he’s afraid.

The Ministry for the Future A Novel (Kim Stanley Robinson)
From legendary science-fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson comes a remarkable vision of climate change over the coming decades.
The Ministry for the Future is a masterpiece of the imagination, using fictional eyewitness accounts to tell the story of how climate change will affect us all. Its setting is not a desolate, post-apocalyptic world, but a future that is almost upon us – and in which we might just overcome the extraordinary challenges we face.
It is a novel both immediate and impactful, desperate and hopeful in equal measure, and it is one of the most powerful and original books on climate change ever written.
One of Barack Obama’s Favorite Books of 2020
“If I could get policymakers, and citizens, everywhere to read just one book this year, it would be Kim Stanley Robinson’s The Ministry for the Future.” (Ezra Klein)
“The best science fiction-nonfiction novel I’ve ever read.” (Jonathan Lethem, Vanity Fair)
“A breathtaking look at the challenges that face our planet in all their sprawling magnitude and also in their intimate, individual moments of humanity.” (Booklist, starred)

The Midnight Library : A Novel (Matt Haig)
The number one New York Times best-selling worldwide phenomenon
Winner of the Goodreads Choice Award for Fiction
A Good Morning America Book Club Pick
Independent (London) 10 Best Books of the Year
“A feel-good book guaranteed to lift your spirits.” (The Washington Post)
The dazzling favorite about the choices that go into a life well lived, from the acclaimed author of How to Stop Time and The Comfort Book.
A library with an endless number of volumes, each of which tells the tale of a different world, is located somewhere beyond the edge of the cosmos. The tale of your life as it is is told in one book, and the story of the life you might have had if you had made a different decision at any moment in the past is told in another. What if you had the chance to visit the library and discover for yourself how your life might have been? We all wonder how our lives might have been. Which of these alternate lives would be genuinely better?
Nora Seed has to make this choice in Matt Haig’s enthralling bestseller The Midnight Library. She must look within herself as she moves through the Midnight Library to determine what is truly fulfilling in life and what makes it worthwhile to live in the first place. She may be faced with the possibility of changing her life for a new one, pursuing a different career, going back to old breakups, or realizing her dreams of becoming a glaciologist.

The Desert of Glass (Michael C. Grumley)
One of mankind’s greatest secrets… has been hiding in plain sight for three thousand years. Half a century ago, an aberration was spotted by one of our earliest satellites, and summarily dismissed as a hardware malfunction. But it was no aberration. And no malfunction. It was an accidental glimpse of something extraordinary, and very old.
Mocked for decades, the man who designed the satellite is now dead. With the system’s original data firmly in the hands of former NTSB investigator Joe Rickards and anthropologist Angela Reed.
But the data is only to be shared with one other person besides them: a seventy-five-year-old NASA engineer who was part of the original program.
Joe Rickards is convinced it will lead mankind into darkness. Angela believes it may be the answer the modern world has been longing for. And former NASA engineer Leonard Townsend hasn’t the slightest idea what he’s about to get involved in.
To make matters worse, through a strange bedside confession, a journalist thousands of miles away has just learned that someone else already knows about the satellite’s fifty-year-old discovery. Because they’ve been secretly using it for years.

The Book Thief (Markus Zusak)
When Death has a story to tell, you listen. It is 1939. Nazi Germany. The country is holding its breath. Death has never been busier, and will be busier still.
By her brother’s graveside, Liesel’s life is changed when she picks up a single object, particularly hidden in the snow. It is The Gravedigger’s Handbook, left behind there by accident, and it is her first act of book thievery. So begins a love affair with books and words, as Liesel, with the help of her accordion-playing foster father, learns to read. Soon she is stealing books from Nazi book-burnings, the mayor’s wife’s library, wherever there are books to be found.
But these are dangerous times. When Liesel’s foster family hides a Jew in their basement, Liesel’s world is both opened up, and closed down.
Narrated by Death, a male voice who over the course of the book proves to be morose yet caring. The plot follows Liesel Meminger as she comes of age in Nazi Germany during World War II. After the death of her younger brother on a train to a fictional street by the name of Himmel street in the fictional town of Molching, Germany, on the outskirts of Munich, Liesel arrives at the home of her new foster parents, Hans and Rosa Hubermann, distraught and withdrawn. She meets a boy named Rudy Steiner in a football match and whenever she wins, Rudy throws a snowball smack in Liesel’s face. Liesel starts to settle down into her new home and during her time there, she is exposed to the horrors of the Nazi regime, caught between the innocence of childhood and the maturity demanded by her destructive surroundings. As the political situation in Germany deteriorates, her foster parents conceal a Jewish man named Max Vandenburg. Hans, who has developed a close relationship with Liesel, teaches her to read, first in her bedroom, then in her basement. Recognizing the power of writing and sharing the written word, Liesel not only begins to steal books that the Nazi party is looking to destroy, but also writes her own story, and shares the power of language with Max. Through collecting laundry for her foster mother, she also begins a relationship with the mayor’s wife, Ilsa Hermann, who allows her to first read books in her library, and later, steal them.
One day, as a group of Jewish prisoners is led through town towards Dachau Concentration Camp, Hans offers one particularly weak man a piece of bread, drawing the ire of others in the town. Max leaves the Hubermanns’ home soon after out of fear that Hans’s act will draw suspicion on the Hubermann household and their activities. Eventually, as punishment for this act, Hans’s long-withheld application to join the National Socialist German Workers’ Party is approved and he is drafted into the army, cleaning up the aftermath of bombings on the German home front. A while later, Liesel sees Max among a group of prisoners and joins him in the march, ignoring a soldier’s order to step away and getting whipped as punishment.
After Hans returns home, bombs fall on Liesel’s street in Molching, killing all of her friends, family, and neighbors. Liesel, working on her manuscript in the basement at the time of the raid, is the sole survivor. The workers, searching for survivors and cleaning up the scene, take Liesel’s manuscript along with the rubble, but Death saves it. Devastated, Liesel is taken in by the mayor, and his wife Ilsa Hermann and refuses to clean the ashes off herself until she walks into the river where her friend Rudy saved a book before, saying her final goodbyes to him. In 1945, Liesel works in the tailor shop owned by Rudy’s father when Max enters. They have an emotional reunion.
Many years later, or in the words of Death, “just yesterday” , Liesel dies as an old woman in the suburbs of Sydney, Australia, with a family and many friends, but has never forgotten Hans, Rosa, Rudy, and her brother. When Death collects her soul, he gives her the manuscript she lost in the bombing. She asks him if he read it and Death says yes. She asks him if he understood it, but Death is unable to understand the duality of humanity. Death’s last words are for both Liesel and the reader: “I am haunted by humans.”

Station Eleven (Emily St. John Mandel)
NATIONAL BESTSELLER • NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FINALIST • A PEN/FAULKNER AWARD FINALIST • Set in the eerie days of civilization’s collapse—the spellbinding story of a Hollywood star, his would-be savior, and a nomadic group of actors roaming the scattered outposts of the Great Lakes region, risking everything for art and humanity. • Now an original series on HBO Max. • Over one million copies sold!
Kirsten Raymonde will never forget the night Arthur Leander, the famous Hollywood actor, had a heart attack on stage during a production of King Lear. That was the night when a devastating flu pandemic arrived in the city, and within weeks, civilization as we know it came to an end.
Twenty years later, Kirsten moves between the settlements of the altered world with a small troupe of actors and musicians. They call themselves The Traveling Symphony, and they have dedicated themselves to keeping the remnants of art and humanity alive. But when they arrive in St. Deborah by the Water, they encounter a violent prophet who will threaten the tiny band’s existence. And as the story takes off, moving back and forth in time, and vividly depicting life before and after the pandemic, the strange twist of fate that connects them all will be revealed.

Ready Player One (Ernest Cline)
At once wildly original and stuffed with irresistible nostalgia, Ready Player One is a spectacularly genre-busting, ambitious, and charming debut – part quest novel, part love story, and part virtual space opera set in a universe where spell-slinging mages battle giant Japanese robots, entire planets are inspired by Blade Runner, and flying DeLoreans achieve light speed. It’s the year 2044, and the real world is an ugly place.
Like most of humanity, Wade Watts escapes his grim surroundings by spending his waking hours jacked into the OASIS, a sprawling virtual utopia that lets you be anything you want to be, a place where you can live and play and fall in love on any of 10,000 planets.
And like most of humanity, Wade dreams of being the one to discover the ultimate lottery ticket that lies concealed within this virtual world. For somewhere inside this giant networked playground, OASIS creator James Halliday has hidden a series of fiendish puzzles that will yield massive fortune – and remarkable power – to whoever can unlock them.
For years, millions have struggled fruitlessly to attain this prize, knowing only that Halliday’s riddles are based in the pop culture he loved – that of the late 20th century. And for years, millions have found in this quest another means of escape, retreating into happy, obsessive study of Halliday’s icons. Like many of his contemporaries, Wade is as comfortable debating the finer points of John Hughes’s oeuvre, playing Pac-Man, or reciting Devo lyrics as he is scrounging power to run his OASIS rig.
And then Wade stumbles upon the first puzzle.
Suddenly the whole world is watching, and thousands of competitors join the hunt – among them certain powerful players who are willing to commit very real murder to beat Wade to this prize. Now the only way for Wade to survive and preserve everything he knows is to win. But to do so, he may have to leave behind his oh-so-perfect virtual existence and face up to life – and love – in the real world he’s always been so desperate to escape.
A world at stake.
A quest for the ultimate prize.
Are you ready?

Project Hail Mary (Andy Weir)
Winner of the 2022 Audie Awards Audiobook of the Year.
Number-One Audible and New York Times Audio Best Seller
A lone astronaut must save the earth from disaster in this incredible new science-based thriller from the number-one New York Times best-selling author of The Martian.
Ryland Grace is the sole survivor on a desperate, last-chance mission – and if he fails, humanity and the Earth itself will perish.
Except that right now, he doesn’t know that. He can’t even remember his own name, let alone the nature of his assignment or how to complete it.
All he knows is that he’s been asleep for a very, very long time. And he’s just been awakened to find himself millions of miles from home, with nothing but two corpses for company.
His crewmates dead, his memories fuzzily returning, he realizes that an impossible task now confronts him. Alone on this tiny ship that’s been cobbled together by every government and space agency on the planet and hurled into the depths of space, it’s up to him to conquer an extinction-level threat to our species.
And thanks to an unexpected ally, he just might have a chance.
Part scientific mystery, part dazzling interstellar journey, Project Hail Mary is a tale of discovery, speculation, and survival to rival The Martian – while taking us to places it never dreamed of going.

Lessons in Chemistry (Bonnie Garmus)
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • GOOD MORNING AMERICA BOOK CLUB PICK • A must-read debut! Meet Elizabeth Zott: a “formidable, unapologetic and inspiring” (PARADE) scientist in 1960s California whose career takes a detour when she becomes the unlikely star of a beloved TV cooking show in this novel that is “irresistible, satisfying and full of fuel. It reminds you that change takes time and always requires heat” (The New York Times Book Review).
“A unique heroine … you’ll find yourself wishing she wasn’t fictional.” —Seattle Times
Chemist Elizabeth Zott is not your average woman. In fact, Elizabeth Zott would be the first to point out that there is no such thing as an average woman.
But it’s the early 1960s and her all-male team at Hastings Research Institute takes a very unscientific view of equality. Except for one: Calvin Evans; the lonely, brilliant, Nobel–prize nominated grudge-holder who falls in love with—of all things—her mind. True chemistry results.
But like science, life is unpredictable. Which is why a few years later Elizabeth Zott finds herself not only a single mother, but the reluctant star of America’s most beloved cooking show Supper at Six. Elizabeth’s unusual approach to cooking (“combine one tablespoon acetic acid with a pinch of sodium chloride”) proves revolutionary. But as her following grows, not everyone is happy. Because as it turns out, Elizabeth Zott isn’t just teaching women to cook. She’s daring them to change the status quo.
Laugh-out-loud funny, shrewdly observant, and studded with a dazzling cast of supporting characters, Lessons in Chemistry is as original and vibrant as its protagonist.

Cloud Cuckoo Land : A Novel
On the New York Times bestseller list for 19 weeks * A New York Times Notable Book * A Barack Obama Favorite * A National Book Award Finalist * Named a Best of the Year by Fresh Air, Time, Entertainment Weekly, Associated Press, and many more—one of the ten books that appeared on the most lists for 2021
“If you’re looking for a superb novel, look no further.” —The Washington Post
From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of All the Light We Cannot See, comes the instant New York Times bestseller that is a “wildly inventive, humane and uplifting book for adults that’s infused with the magic of childhood reading experiences” (The New York Times Book Review).
Anthony Doerr’s stunning third book is a triumph of compassion and imagination, a story of youngsters on the edge of adulthood in dangerous settings who find resiliency, hope, and a book. It is one of the most well-known and cherished books of 2021. Doerr has woven a stunning tapestry of eras and locations into Cloud Cuckoo Land that represents our profound interconnectedness—with other species, with one another, with those who came before us, and with those who will come after us.
Orphaned 13-year-old Anna lives in a home of women who work at embroidering priest vestments inside the fortified walls of Constantinople. Anna, who is restless and insatiably curious, learns to read. In this ancient city, which is renowned for its libraries, she discovers a book that tells the tale of Aethon, a man who yearns to be transformed into a bird so that he can soar to a utopian paradise in the skies. As the walls of the only place she has ever known are being shelled during the lengthy siege of Constantinople, she reads this to her ailing sister. Omeir, a villager miles from home, is enlisted with his beloved oxen into the advancing army outside the fortified area. He will come into contact with Anna.
Five kids are being rehearsed in a play adaptation of Atheon’s story that has been successfully maintained through the ages, thanks to octogenarian Zeno, who learnt Greek as a prisoner of war, five hundred years later in an Idaho library. A bomb was hidden amid the library’s bookshelves and was detonated by Seymour, a troubled and idealistic kid. It is a new siege. On the not-too-distant future interstellar cruiser Argos, Konstance is by herself in a vault, writing down the tale of Aethon that her father had previously given her on scraps of sacking. She’s never been in our world before.
Anna, Omeir, Seymour, Zeno, and Konstance are visionaries and outsiders who discover resilience and optimism in the face of the greatest danger, much like Marie-Laure and Werner in All the Light We Cannot See. Their lives are delightfully linked, and Doerr’s vivid imagination carries us away to dramatic, absorbing realms where we momentarily forget about our own. Cloud Cuckoo Land is a beautiful and redeemed story about stewardship—of the book, of the Earth, of the human heart—dedicated to “the librarians then, now, and in the years to come.”

Into the Abyss : An Extraordinary True Story by Shaben, Carol
On an icy night in October 1984, a Piper Navajo commuter plane carrying 9 passengers crashed in the remote wilderness of northern Alberta, killing 6 people. Four survived: the rookie pilot, a prominent politician, a cop, and the criminal he was escorting to face charges. Despite the poor weather, Erik Vogel, the 24-year-old pilot, was under intense pressure to fly–a situation not uncommon to pilots working for small airlines. Overworked and exhausted, he feared losing his job if he refused to fly. Larry Shaben, the author’s father and Canada’s first Muslim Cabinet Minister, was commuting home after a busy week at the Alberta Legislature. After Paul Archambault, a drifter wanted on an outstanding warrant, boarded the plane, rookie Constable Scott Deschamps decided, against RCMP regulations, to remove his handcuffs–a decision that profoundly impacted the men’s survival.
As they fought through the night to stay alive, the dividing lines of power, wealth and status were erased and each man was forced to confront the precious and limited nature of his existence. The survivors forged unlikely friendships and through them found strength and courage to rebuild their lives. Into the Abyss is a powerful narrative that combines in-depth reporting with sympathy and grace to explore how a single, tragic event can upset our assumptions and become a catalyst for transformation.

The Spy and the Traitor The Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War (Macintyre, Ben)
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The celebrated author of Double Cross and Rogue Heroes returns with his greatest spy story yet, a thrilling Americans-era tale of Oleg Gordievsky, the Russian whose secret work helped hasten the end of the Cold War.
“The best true spy story I have ever read.”—JOHN LE CARRÉ
Named a Best Book of the Year by The Economist • Shortlisted for the Bailie Giffords Prize in Nonfiction
Oleg Gordievsky was the most likely candidate to be compared to the notorious British double-agent Kim Philby in Russia. The smart, sophisticated Gordievsky, the son of two KGB operatives and a product of the best Soviet institutions, came to view communism in his country as both criminal and philistine. He accepted his first position with Russian intelligence in 1968 and eventually rose to the position of top Soviet official in London, but starting in 1973, he surreptitiously began working for MI6. Gordievsky assisted the West in turning the tables on the KGB for nearly ten years as the Cold War came to an end. He exposed Russian spies and helped thwart numerous intelligence plots as the Soviet leadership grew more and more fearful of the United States’ ability to launch a nuclear first strike, which pushed the world even closer to war. MI6 was desperate to keep the circle of trust small, so it withheld Gordievsky’s name from its CIA counterparts, who in turn became fixated with discovering the identity of Britain’s obviously high-level source. Gordievsky was ultimately doomed by their obsession: the CIA agent tasked with identifying him was none other than Aldrich Ames, who would later gain notoriety for covertly spying for the Soviets.
Ben Macintyre’s most recent work may be his best yet, revealing the delectable three-way gamesmanship between America, Britain, and the Soviet Union and culminating in the riveting visual beat-by-beat of Gordievsky’s hair-raising escape from Moscow in 1985. It immerses readers in a world of deceit and betrayal, where the lines between the personal and the professional blur, and where one man’s hate of communism had the potential to alter the future of entire countries, much like the greatest works of John le Carré.

Winter World (A.G. Riddle)
The ice is coming. It was the last thing we expected, but the world is freezing. A new ice age has dawned and humanity has been forced to confront its own extinction. Billions have fled the glaciers, crowding out the world’s last habitable zones. They can run from the ice, but they can’t escape human nature: a cataclysmic war is coming.
In orbit, a group of scientists are running the Winter Experiments, a last-ditch attempt to understand why the planet is cooling. None of the climate models they build make sense. But then they discover an anomaly, an unexplained variation in solar radiation…and something else. Close to the burning edge of the sun, they catch a fleeting glimpse of something that shouldn’t be there.
Suddenly humanity must face the possibility it is not alone in the universe. And the terrifying possibility that whatever is out there may be trying to exterminate us.
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I sincerely request you to share this site or page with your friends, colleagues, relatives or anyone. Because by doing this they will benefit in one way or another through you and thus your importance will increase manifold.
~
~~
~~~
Thank you from the bottom of my heart for doing this, have a nice day.