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Time isn't just running out — it's falling apart.

In a universe of galax-seas and clockwork worlds, young inventor Millicent Gearwright notices something terrifying: days are bleeding into nights, seasons are colliding, and history is replaying in chaos. The cosmic clock is broken — and she might be the only one who can fix it.

Armed with her wits, her loyal robot Quark, and an unlikely crew including a poet whose words bend reality and a roguish time-stealing space pirate, Millicent races to the edge of everything before the universe unravels completely.

Readers call it "a whole new experience of fun and quirkiness" and "unlike anything you've ever read" — a thrilling blend of science fiction, steampunk, and adventure that even self-proclaimed non-sci-fi fans can't put down.

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Publisher: Owl Club Media Group
ASIN: B0DBPSG2FH
ISBN-13: 979-8991259507
Print length: 352 pages
Book: 1 of 3

  • Science Fiction

  • Fantasy

  • Space Opera

  • Galactic Empire

“A rare series opener that balances clockwork cleverness with genuine emotional depth. Read it—and prepare to want the sequel.”
★★★★½

This story was so good. The characters were so well developed and the scenes were drawn out so great. I felt I was right there every step of the way. I would highly recommend this book.
★★★★★

This book was genuinely a fresh and unique experience. It isn’t what I typically read but it is worth reading! It’s a whole new experience of fun and quirkiness. I hope you pick this book up and enjoy it as much as I did. Something different but utterly fascinating and great!
★★★★

The story moves at a fast pace, character driven and detail oriented. Adventure, thrills and quirky characters make for a fun and fascinating read. Fans of Sci-fi will find enjoyment in this epic tale. A good read.
★★★★

You’ll Love Clockwork Constellation if you enjoy…

  • Douglas AdamsThe Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
    For the wit, absurdity, and cleverness in a collapsing cosmos

  • Becky ChambersThe Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet
    For the found family in space and heart-led sci-fi

  • Jeff VanderMeerAnnihilation
    For the surreal, strange transformations and reality bending

  • China MiévilleEmbassytown
    For linguistic weirdness and philosophical depth in alien contact

  • Dan SimmonsHyperion
    For the grand scale, poetic prose, and fractured time storytelling

  • Martha WellsThe Murderbot Diaries
    For a compelling, deeply human AI protagonist

  • Terry Pratchett & Stephen BaxterThe Long Earth
    For parallel worlds, philosophical exploration, and sly humor

  • Iain M. BanksPlayer of Games
    For a post-scarcity future with moral complexity and galactic stakes

  • Neal Asher – The Skinner

    For: Bio-horror in space, mind-bending tech, and wild post-human evolution
    A twisted space opera where transformation is both physical and mental.

  • Charles Stross – Saturn’s Children

    For: Rogue AI navigating a post-human galaxy with wit and social critique
    Like Murderbot meets noir, but with even weirder tech and sharper bite.

  • Alan Dean Foster – The Tar-Aiym Krang

    For: Swashbuckling space adventure with ancient tech and cosmic mysteries
    Old-school space opera energy with hidden depth and a charismatic rogue.

  • Ramez Naam – Nexus

    For: Consciousness hacking, ethical quandaries, and emerging post-human societies
    Explores the cost of neural connectivity and control with real stakes.

  • Madeleine Ashby – vN

    For: Artificial intelligence, generational programming, and identity
    A robot girl self-evolves against her code—think Quark with sharper edges.

  • Christopher Priest – The Inverted World

    For: Mind-warping world mechanics and distorted perception of time and space
    A novel where reality literally bends beneath your feet—brilliantly unsettling.

  • Kameron Hurley – The Stars Are Legion

    For: Living ships, all-female cast, grotesque body horror, and unreliable narration
    Organic weirdness, survival, and mythic undertones inside sentient starcraft.

  • Alastair Reynolds – House of Suns

    For: Long-view space travel, clones with diverging identities, and deep philosophical questions
    Explores memory, identity, and legacy over a million-year timeline.

  • Sean Williams & Shane Dix – Echoes of Earth

    For: Post-human sleeper agents, alien interference, and high-concept sci-fi mystery
    Alien contact meets psychological espionage and split consciousness.

  • Tim Powers – The Anubis Gates

    For: Literary time travel with occult science and historical absurdity
    Not space-bound, but shares Chrono Chaos’ clever temporal weirdness and genre fusion.