

Press / Media
The Cosmic Vision of Agron Shehu
Philosophical science-fiction that bridges science, time, and the human spirit. Agron Shehu’s novels — Humans in SpaceTime… What a Shock and PostHumans — follow luminous minds through evolution, conscience, and cosmic silence, asking a simple question with infinite echoes: what makes us human, and what comes after?
Quick Facts
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Name: Agron Shehu
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Based in: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
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Genres: Philosophical Science-Fiction, Metaphysical Fiction
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Notable Works: Humans in SpaceTime… What a Shock; PostHumans; A Life to Tell…
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Themes: Mind vs. emotion, evolution, consciousness, technology, destiny
Media Contact
Email: azshehu@gmail.com | agron.shehu.author@gmail.com
Website: www.agronshehu.com
Amazon Author Page: amazon.com/author/agron_books
Social: Facebook • LinkedIn

Author Bio
Agron Shehu is a Canadian author whose work fuses science, philosophy, and story into a single arc of wonder. Born in Albania and tempered by decades of fieldwork from the deserts of Libya to the wide North Atlantic, he turned a life in energy into literature about the energy of the mind.
His novels — Humans in SpaceTime… What a Shock and its sequel PostHumans — trace the conflict between intellect and emotion across deep time, following figures like Higgs, Quark, and Ardi through evolution’s long mirror. Shehu writes not only to imagine futures, but to illuminate the present — where progress and self-destruction wrestle in the same human heart. He lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Book Snapshots
Humans in SpaceTime… What a Shock
A journey through evolution, consciousness, and cosmic time — where intellect and emotion collide.
PostHumans
When mind outlives flesh: a luminous exploration of what humanity becomes beyond biology and fear.
A Life to Tell…
A memoir of endurance and innocence — the personal thread woven through grand ideas.
Sample Interview Questions
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Your novels dramatize the struggle between intellect and emotion — why center that duel?
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How did your global engineering career shape the cosmic scale of your fiction?
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What do “PostHumans” look like to you — ethically, emotionally, spiritually?
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How do you balance scientific ideas with poetic language?
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If readers take one idea from your work, what should it be?





