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Robby Miller

Author of Death and other Taxes

2 Works 3 Members 2 Reviews

Works by Robby Miller

Death and other Taxes (2013) 2 copies, 1 review
Death & I Are Too Close 1 copy, 1 review

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Reviews

2 reviews
A father’s memoir of bereavement, grief and suicide. Apparently, Death has a morbid fascination with me. The following chapters catalogue the many times I have been close to death—the most devastating were my two sons: Tim, who died risk taking when he was 15, and James, who took his own life at 27. What we can learn from death and how to make it manageable is the reason I am writing here. https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1442622
The question "Where Are the Atheist Fiction Books?" has been asked by Hemant Mehta of Patheos.com. We need more of the genre: Fant-sci Fiction (fantasy rooted in footnotes).

Death and other Taxes," by Robby Miller adds to the works of Phillip Pullman, Douglas Adams and Gene Roddenberry. It is an allegory encouraging readers to let go of the human compulsion to want to see their lost loved ones again. It's a reinvention of the 'life after death' story intended to gently help people accept that show more there is no life after death - originally composed as an answer to everyone who tried but failed to console me by saying my teenage son was still there somewhere. Kirkus Reviews sums it up with the words, "In his often disturbing yet oddly endearing first novel, Miller creates a kind of “Jabberwocky”-style story in which fans of strange, Seuss-ian characters... will feel right at home... Yet the story is so whimsically told that the Through the Looking Glass frivolity starts to make a strange sort of sense." https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/robert-miller/death-and-other-taxes/

Avery Hurt, a full-time freelance writer who specializes in literature, health and science journalism says, "This book seemed to me like The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy meets Dante... Joan Didion wrote that “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.” Miller is telling himself, and us, stories to help us deal with death. As [the boy] eventually comes to accept and understand his death, the reader comes to accept the deaths of us all." http://www.selfpublishingreview.com/blog/2013/10/review-death-and-other-taxes-by...

This fant-sci novel fills a niche between atheist apologetics and pure imagination. It is designed to question popular notions of eternity through telling a new story in order for us to to live with the reality of Death - who, incidentally, is characterised as you've never seen her before. - https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/316200#longDescription
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Statistics

Works
2
Members
3
Popularity
#1,791,149
Rating
4.0
Reviews
2
ISBNs
2