Aliens are People, Too (sort of)
By Berinn Rae, author of the Colliding
Worlds Trilogy
Readers have long been fascinated with vampires and werewolves. These
creatures have been a staple of the paranormal romance genre since term
“paranormal romance” was coined. They are the subjects of legend, but there is
another one found in even older legends and one that persists to this day.
Aliens.
Nearly every ancient civilization has some link to the belief that we
are not alone in the universe. Many ancient races, such as the Egyptians,
pondered life among the stars. Some races, like the Sumerians, went so far as
to believe their gods came down from the stars. To this day, some believe the
Mayans gained their science from aliens.
Intrigued by millennia of inferences and postulations, I thought, “What
if aliens came to earth during our lifetimes?” and so the Colliding Worlds trilogy was born.
Beyond our world lies the
unknown. Countless planets with endless possibilities. On one of those worlds,
many galaxies from our home, an epic war has started a chain reaction, sending
the war on a collision course with Earth. In the bloody aftermath of the Noble
War of Sephia, the conquered Draeken flee, and the triumphant Sephians give
pursuit. The first habitable planet in their path is a small, temperate planet
called…earth. We are no longer alone.
The Colliding Worlds Trilogy
isn’t the first series to start with an alien invasion, and it won’t certainly
be the last (unless of course aliens do
invade us tomorrow and life ends as we know it). What would we do if an
advanced people suddenly landed on our proverbial doorstep? Would we welcome
our guests with open arms? Would we attack on sight? I suspect the answer lies
somewhere in between.
Perhaps one of the best outcomes of human-like aliens coming to earth
would be that we’d be forced to reexamine what it means to be truly human. In
the V television and book series, for
example, the aliens who came to earth looked very different and had ulterior
motives. But some of the Visitors had very human attributes, such as love and
sacrifice. Did that make them human? Probably not, but what if they had looked
more human? What then?
The aliens in the Colliding
Worlds trilogy aren’t lizards, like the Visitors were in V, though their anatomy differs from
ours. The golden-skinned Sephians have tattoo-like marks covering their bodies.
The Draeken have wings. Biologically, we are compatible with both the Sephians
and the Draeken, and much of the trilogy is focused on coming to terms with
embracing similarities and coming to terms with differences. Stereotypes,
discrimination, and profiling abound.
All three books in the trilogy propose that being
human isn’t about how someone looks or where they were born. But that to be
human is to have compassion.
What do you think it is to be human?
Explosion, the final book in the Colliding Worlds Trilogy is now out!
The first two books in the trilogy—Collision and Implosion—are
on sale for only $1.99 each at Amazon!
Thanks for hosting me, Melly Mel!!
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