With money to burn and time to spend, Sol Mann embarks on a journey through Costa Rica that would change him in a fundamental way. Where does he get his money? And what is he running from? . . . We don’t really know. But that doesn’t matter when your days are filled with cheap weed, good rum, and great women. . . .
It is the story of a nearby future, not too dark but neither too bright. A world ravaged by economic failure and a drastic solution, slavery. Follow the trials of Jonathan, a 12 years old, a bright student and a slave of a Scientific Institution . . . . . . which works to upgrade the intelligence of dolphins. And his unlikely . . .
I found it difficult to read "Call it Freedom." The grammar and sentence structure could use some work. It’s hard to fault the author too much for that because his native tongue is not English.
The plot is the most interesting thing about the story. In a nutshell, Slavery is legalized. [more . . .]