
Neuen
A Sci-Fi Mystery
by Sheri Singerling
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Pub Date Jul 08 2025 | Archive Date Jul 01 2025
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Description
Neuen is a planet of extremes, thanks to a crawling rotation rate. Nights of bitter cold. Days of searing heat. For Levi Zetmer and the other Reisende, survival means a nomadic existence chasing the ever-shifting twilight. Exiled from the polar cities for their “flawed” genetics, they live under constant surveillance, forced to cleanse their bloodlines birth by birth.
It’s Lyn’s job to keep them on track. A polar city denizen, she travels from Reisender settlement to settlement and monitors the genomes of the newborns. The work is lonely and tedious until all the inhabitants of a neighboring settlement mysteriously die, and Lyn is tasked with uncovering the cause of the deaths.
For the journey, she needs help from Reisende knowledgeable in plagues and blights. Levi’s expertise in the latter earns him a place in her expedition. But all their efforts yield only questions, and whatever killed the others seems poised to wipe out Levi’s settlement next.
Lyn is determined to find a solution. Levi is dead set on learning the truth. Together they just might be able to unravel the mystery. Will what they learn finally free the Reisende from their age-old shackles? Or will the truth break them?
Neuen is a science fiction mystery with aspects of genetic engineering and botany.
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9798991475228 |
PRICE | $4.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 281 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews

Thank you to HypIn Publishing and NetGalley for the opportunity to read and review Neuen!
Neuen is a gripping, thoughtful sci-fi mystery with depth and heart, ideal for readers who appreciate substance over speed. It unfolds on a slow-turning planet where extremes of heat and cold dictate not only how people live, but who gets to survive.
Singerling constructs a society in which genetic “GLEtch” determines exile. The privileged remain in climate-controlled cities; the rest are forced into nomadic life as Reisende, wandering the margins of habitable space. It’s a brutal, slow-moving system of segregation that doesn’t need violence to sustain itself, just silence and routine compliance.
The world-building is rich with subtlety. Rather than sweeping exposition, Singerling allows the landscape, the climate, and the unspoken rules to tell us everything we need to know.
Lyn and Levi, the two central characters, reflect the novel’s deeper tensions. Lyn is a monitor of genetic compliance, sent to investigate a settlement that’s begun to fail. Levi, a Reisende and plant pathologist, is both a guide and skeptic; of Lyn's mission, her institution, and everything she represents.
Their interactions are compelling but never romanticised. Where Lyn is analytical and distanced, Levi is grounded and wary. Their relationship feels like a negotiation between two worldviews, shaped by the environments that made them. However, at times, their individual arcs feel slightly underexplored, especially Levi’s, whose emotional depth deserves more attention than the plot sometimes grants him.
The science is well-integrated and engaging, especially for readers interested in genetics, plant pathology, and climate. But its integration into the mystery isn’t always seamless. There are moments when the pacing slows to accommodate dense commentary, which may frustrate readers looking for immediacy or action.
Still, Neuen succeeds in what it sets out to do: it asks uncomfortable questions and lets them breathe. For readers drawn to political undertones, quiet resistance, and speculative worlds that feel eerily plausible, this one will linger.