menu
{ "item_title" : "Between the Rocks-THE BELT", "item_author" : [" Jim Bob Pearson "], "item_description" : "The Visitors did not come to Earth. They came back.The hollow asteroid changed everything. Within hours of Joe's discovery, every alien mineral deposit in the solar system began resonating in synchrony-a harmonized frequency pulsing like a planetary heartbeat suddenly finding its rhythm. On Earth, instruments across every dome registered the shift. On Mars, the geometric patterns Joe mapped in the deep strata began to glow, visible through meters of overburden to sensors that had never detected such emissions. In the belt, inert rocks that had tumbled since before human memory started to sing in frequencies that made nearby equipment hum in sympathy.And the Visitors responded.For decades, they maintained a careful, measured presence among humanity. They learned languages, formed genuine relationships, and were maddeningly uninformative about their ultimate purpose. Keth-who had been attending Dale Wong's church services and eating Linda's snickerdoodles in the Tulsa Dome for years-was perhaps the most visible example. Patient. Quiet. Waiting.That patience ended when the hollow asteroid opened.What Keth eventually reveals, in Linda's kitchen while she presses another plate of cookies on him with the serenity of a woman who has been feeding an alien for years, is this: the mineral network is older than the Visitors themselves. It was created by something else-beings they call the Architects. The network activates in stages, each triggered by local intelligence reaching a specific threshold. The Visitors came to Earth not as explorers but as caretakers-watchers assigned to monitor a species approaching that threshold.They expected to have more time. Joe Wong and his drill accelerated the timeline by decades.Flipper's telepathic abilities expand dramatically. Through their neural bond, Joe experiences a vast web of information and awareness spanning not just the solar system but reaching outward toward staggering distances. The network is not just communication-it is a record, a memory, a library accumulated over timescales that make geological epochs look like coffee breaks. The signal does not care about qualifications. Joe activated the system. Joe is the node.He is not equipped for this. He is a driller-good with machines, rock, bourbon, and Flipper. Not a diplomat, not a scientist, and not the person anyone would choose as humanity's interface with intelligence predating complex life. But the network does not operate on human organizational charts.The political fallout is immediate. Helios tries to claim proprietary rights to the network-a legal position so absurd it would be funny if the company did not have the resources to cause real damage. Dome governments react with a volatile mixture of awe and panic. The Visitors, no longer passive observers, begin communicating openly, and their communications reveal that the coming changes are neither optional nor reversible.Dale Wong, preacher and friend to Keth, becomes an unexpected bridge between species. His faith, broad enough to accommodate an alien at the dinner table, proves remarkably well-suited to helping people process the revelation that the universe is far more crowded and far more interested in humanity than anyone believed. Linda keeps making cookies and feeding everyone who walks through her door-the most human counterpoint to cosmic-scale events imaginable.Book four of BETWEEN THE ROCKS transforms the series into first-contact narrative-not ships descending from the sky, but the slow recognition that contact has been happening for years, quietly, at kitchen tables and in church pews, in the resonance of a mineral humming in the dark since before life crawled from Earth's oceans.The truth is in the signal. The patience is in the stone. And Joe Wong is exactly where the universe needs him-between the rocks.", "item_img_path" : "https://covers2.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/9/79/819/763/9798197636829_b.jpg", "price_data" : { "retail_price" : "8.99", "online_price" : "8.99", "our_price" : "8.99", "club_price" : "8.99", "savings_pct" : "0", "savings_amt" : "0.00", "club_savings_pct" : "0", "club_savings_amt" : "0.00", "discount_pct" : "10", "store_price" : "" } }
Between the Rocks-THE BELT|Jim Bob Pearson

Between the Rocks-THE BELT : Signal and Stone- (Book 4)

local_shippingShip to Me
In Stock.
FREE Shipping for Club Members help

Overview

The Visitors did not come to Earth. They came back.

The hollow asteroid changed everything. Within hours of Joe's discovery, every alien mineral deposit in the solar system began resonating in synchrony-a harmonized frequency pulsing like a planetary heartbeat suddenly finding its rhythm. On Earth, instruments across every dome registered the shift. On Mars, the geometric patterns Joe mapped in the deep strata began to glow, visible through meters of overburden to sensors that had never detected such emissions. In the belt, inert rocks that had tumbled since before human memory started to sing in frequencies that made nearby equipment hum in sympathy.

And the Visitors responded.

For decades, they maintained a careful, measured presence among humanity. They learned languages, formed genuine relationships, and were maddeningly uninformative about their ultimate purpose. Keth-who had been attending Dale Wong's church services and eating Linda's snickerdoodles in the Tulsa Dome for years-was perhaps the most visible example. Patient. Quiet. Waiting.

That patience ended when the hollow asteroid opened.

What Keth eventually reveals, in Linda's kitchen while she presses another plate of cookies on him with the serenity of a woman who has been feeding an alien for years, is this: the mineral network is older than the Visitors themselves. It was created by something else-beings they call the Architects. The network activates in stages, each triggered by local intelligence reaching a specific threshold. The Visitors came to Earth not as explorers but as caretakers-watchers assigned to monitor a species approaching that threshold.

They expected to have more time. Joe Wong and his drill accelerated the timeline by decades.

Flipper's telepathic abilities expand dramatically. Through their neural bond, Joe experiences a vast web of information and awareness spanning not just the solar system but reaching outward toward staggering distances. The network is not just communication-it is a record, a memory, a library accumulated over timescales that make geological epochs look like coffee breaks. The signal does not care about qualifications. Joe activated the system. Joe is the node.

He is not equipped for this. He is a driller-good with machines, rock, bourbon, and Flipper. Not a diplomat, not a scientist, and not the person anyone would choose as humanity's interface with intelligence predating complex life. But the network does not operate on human organizational charts.

The political fallout is immediate. Helios tries to claim proprietary rights to the network-a legal position so absurd it would be funny if the company did not have the resources to cause real damage. Dome governments react with a volatile mixture of awe and panic. The Visitors, no longer passive observers, begin communicating openly, and their communications reveal that the coming changes are neither optional nor reversible.

Dale Wong, preacher and friend to Keth, becomes an unexpected bridge between species. His faith, broad enough to accommodate an alien at the dinner table, proves remarkably well-suited to helping people process the revelation that the universe is far more crowded and far more interested in humanity than anyone believed. Linda keeps making cookies and feeding everyone who walks through her door-the most human counterpoint to cosmic-scale events imaginable.

Book four of BETWEEN THE ROCKS transforms the series into first-contact narrative-not ships descending from the sky, but the slow recognition that contact has been happening for years, quietly, at kitchen tables and in church pews, in the resonance of a mineral humming in the dark since before life crawled from Earth's oceans.

The truth is in the signal. The patience is in the stone. And Joe Wong is exactly where the universe needs him-between the rocks.

This item is Non-Returnable

Details

  • ISBN-13: 9798197636829
  • ISBN-10: 9798197636829
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publish Date: May 2026
  • Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.38 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.55 pounds
  • Page Count: 180

Related Categories

You May Also Like...

    1

BAM Customer Reviews