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Forfeiture

Humanity Caught in the Act

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Pub Date Jul 25 2025 | Archive Date Jul 30 2025

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Description

Iconoclastic eco-SciFi that rethinks our place on Earth:

As Earth’s ecosystems collapse, indigenous peoples invoke an ancient memory to summon long-vanished aliens who revered the planet as a temple of Life. When they return, horrified by the destruction, the aliens give humanity one year to change—or face ominous consequences.

But as internal alien conflict brews, Earth's fate hinges on a fragile hope: can old wisdom spark a new future?

Iconoclastic eco-SciFi that rethinks our place on Earth:

As Earth’s ecosystems collapse, indigenous peoples invoke an ancient memory to summon long-vanished aliens who revered the planet as a temple...


Advance Praise

“Well-told, persuasive ecological SF” - Kirkus Reviews

“Well-told, persuasive ecological SF” - Kirkus Reviews


Marketing Plan

Paperback available Amazon on July 12, 2025 

Paperback available Amazon on July 12, 2025 


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9204353266978
PRICE $4.49 (USD)

Available on NetGalley

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Average rating from 1 member


Featured Reviews

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4 1/2 Stars
This book gave me chills. Forfeiture takes a first-contact premise and turns it into something deeply human and painfully relevant. It starts with Indigenous communities tapping into ancient memories to call back the Indigo—these alien explorers who once saw Earth as a “temple of Life.” They return, 8-foot-tall, color-shifting, and deeply alien, only to find a world wrecked by greed, pollution, and war. Their response? One year. One chance for humanity to undo centuries of harm before they pass judgment.

What makes this story shine is how grounded it feels despite its massive scale. Nebra doesn’t romanticize anyone—Indigenous characters are complex and flawed, the aliens themselves are divided about whether we’re worth saving, and humanity as a whole comes across as… well, complicated. There are moments of horror (especially when the aliens confront the damage we’ve done to wildlife and ecosystems) but also flashes of beauty and hope that make you root for us anyway. It’s part thriller, part moral reckoning, and part love letter to Earth itself. If you like your science fiction full of big ideas, heart, and a serious punch, add this one to your list.

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