Butterfly
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected 6 Apr 2026
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- 22,00 kr
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- Pre-Order
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- 22,00 kr
Publisher Description
When a mysterious visitor falls from the sky, Earth gains more than proof of alien life — it gains a secret that could change humanity forever.
Gilo is not a conqueror, a scientist, or an ambassador. He is a traveler from Olon, a distant world where evolution took a different path, gifting his species with delicate, winglike forms and an understanding of the universe far beyond human imagination. Sent to earth to observe, record, and report, he finds unexpected friendship with, Stephen, a scientist who sees him not as a specimen, but as a person. When called back to Olon, Stephen gifts Gilo with a biological kit that will help explain life on earth. Sadly, the kit was not only rejected by the Council of Olon, but it got into the wrong hands, and the life was released to contaminate the planet. This resulted in a threat to Gilo's life and Stephen having to recruit the help of a space traveler to rescue him. Once back on earth, the government closes in and Chief Investigator Rowan must decide whether Gilo represents a threat to humanity — or its greatest opportunity. Caught between curiosity and control, compassion and secrecy, Gilo must navigate a world driven by suspicion while hiding the deeper purpose behind his journey — a purpose even he does not fully understand.
Butterfly is a heartfelt science-fiction story about first contact, trust across worlds, and the fragile beauty of connection in a universe where being different can be both a miracle and a danger.
Reviewed by Asher Syed for Readers' Favorite
Butterfly by Eileen Sheehan is brilliant speculative fiction, operating in an era of interplanetary travel, where humans have experimental spacecraft and AI labs, and far-off robotic civilizations operate their own technological systems. All the characters are fully developed and feel real. I love that Stephen treats Gilo as a thinking individual rather than a machine. Tollund, a Malonian officer representing a rival extraterrestrial civilization, is the story's primary antagonist. I feel like this is where the story really kicks off, because as far as baddies go, he is a great one! It's interesting how in a full-on tech-driven world, Tollund turns to using actual insects, spores, and seeds to fight. Gilo's world is not biology-adjacent, and this just shows how cleverly Sheehan can flip a narrative into a fabulous and unique weaponization of natural biology. With world-building that is pure cinema, writing that is immersive and sharp, and a storyline with some brave new twists, readers who love intelligent science fiction will adore Butterfly. Very highly recommended.