K.M. Gruchelska is a speculative fiction writer who travels extensively, having lived in Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia.
She is a child of the world, full of conjecture and imagination, and she regards herself as a global citizen. Her characters and situations reflect the diversity and wonder that she experiences during her travels, combined with a philosophical flavour and human drama.
I'm not a big fan of science fiction novels, but I loved the way the story is told. You feel like you're in a TV series. The character development is really detailed and explained. Tahra as the main character does not let the reader down. She is NOT the typical superheroine who can solve everything because of her great superpower. She has a lot to learn and that is precisely what makes the plot so captivating. The characters that accompany Tahra are very well written. The work feels like a complete work, but I think that many parallel works can be created within the same story. Great potential for a series of books.
The book “Seven Point Eight” is an exorbitant science fiction book that incredibly mixes the best of mental exploration, human ambition, and the enigmas that are presented. For this reason, the character Tahra Mamoun, with her incredible capacity for remote sensing, becomes the basis of a project that challenges reality itself. A story which is narrated in a way together with an involving touch of a TV series, immerses you in a universe where quantum physics connect with aliens, with enigmas, with ancestral secrets, together with a dangerous game between betrayals and loyalties. A book that as you go along, takes you to the limits of the mind and the soul. Recommended if you are attracted to readings full of action, cosmic mystery, and that carry a combination of intelligence and romance.
This book caught me off guard. It’s got the big sci-fi ideas, parallel worlds, psychic abilities, and shady organizations, but what really makes it work is the personal side of it. Tahra isn’t some perfect, all-knowing hero. She’s messy, unsure, and trying to figure things out, which makes her story feel real, even when things get weird. The writing has this TV show vibe that keeps you hooked, but it also gives you moments to sit with the big questions. It’s not just about science and space; it’s about ambition, trust, and what happens when you push the limits of what’s possible. Definitely one of those books that stays in your head after you finish.
I'm not a big fan of science fiction novels, but I loved the way the story is told. You feel like you're in a TV series. The character development is really detailed and explained. Tahra as the main character does not let the reader down. She is NOT the typical superheroine who can solve everything because of her great superpower. She has a lot to learn and that is precisely what makes the plot so captivating. The characters that accompany Tahra are very well written. The work feels like a complete work, but I think that many parallel works can be created within the same story. Great potential for a series of books.