Tamás Szikszai
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Born
in Mohács, Hungary
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April 2025
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The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
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Tamás’s Recent Updates
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Tamás Szikszai
added a status update: Readers’ Favorite, 5-Star Review by Keana Sackett-Moomey, "Humor and bizarre situations make the heavy topics approachable, while scenes of rebellion, betrayal, and survival give tension and excitement. The story raises questions about control, power, and human resilience. Fans of sci-fi, adventure, and dark satire will find Tamás Szikszai’s work very entertaining."
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Tamás Szikszai
added a status update: Ten reviews in, and the reactions couldn’t be more human: laughter, doubt, irritation, recognition. Exactly as dystopia should be.
The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool is now out there in the wild — flawed, absurd, and unapologetically alive. If you enjoy satire that risks dividing readers, Winston and Gáben are waiting. |
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Tamás Szikszai
rated a book it was amazing
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I just published my debut novel, The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool. It’s a darkly satirical sci-fi about a planet that gets tired of humanity’s nonsense and decides to push back politely at first, then not so much. Expect philosophical grizzlies ...more |
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"The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool by Tamas Szikszai is a dystopian science fiction novel with humor and commentary that can apply to the modern world. For main characters, we have two heroes who are escaped prisoners from a mining planet. We ha"
Read more of this review »
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Thank you for taking the time to share such a thoughtful and detailed review. I really appreciate it.
The formatting and narrative style were definitel ...more " |
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Tamás Szikszai
shared
a
quote
“Their car was parked elegantly in front of the club. A short line of extravagantly dressed people awaited entry. The door wasn’t automatic; instead, two imposing security guards—either naturally large or enhanced—were checking guests. The guards sported sharp suits and ties, creating a stark contrast to the partygoers, which included Robin Hood, Piglet, and a trio named Jerk, Douche, and Bugsy. It's unclear how one dresses as a jerk or a douche, but somehow they managed. A man also stood patiently in line, clad only in a diaper, presumably for hygiene reasons.”
...more Tamás Szikszai |
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bunny ☆ wrote: "the irony of saying Vonnegut fans would like a novel with an AI-generated book cover is fabulously hilarious."
Touché! You actually nai ...more " |
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Tamás Szikszai
shared
a
quote
“What follows is arguably one of the most hated and horrifying moments in the entire modern human experience — an event so universally loathed, so deeply traumatising, that only the extremely fortunate or the terminally unconscious have ever truly escaped it:
An alarm clock chimed. It didn’t merely beep. It asserted itself, like a bureaucrat with a megaphone and a vendetta against dreams, shattering the delicate peace of sleep with all the subtlety of a marching band in a monastery.” Tamás Szikszai |
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Tamás Szikszai
is now following Anthony's reviews
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Tamás Szikszai
rated a book it was amazing
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“What follows is arguably one of the most hated and horrifying moments in the entire modern human experience — an event so universally loathed, so deeply traumatising, that only the extremely fortunate or the terminally unconscious have ever truly escaped it:
An alarm clock chimed.
It didn’t merely beep. It asserted itself, like a bureaucrat with a megaphone and a vendetta against dreams, shattering the delicate peace of sleep with all the subtlety of a marching band in a monastery.”
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
An alarm clock chimed.
It didn’t merely beep. It asserted itself, like a bureaucrat with a megaphone and a vendetta against dreams, shattering the delicate peace of sleep with all the subtlety of a marching band in a monastery.”
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
“Their car was parked elegantly in front of the club. A short line of extravagantly dressed people awaited entry. The door wasn’t automatic; instead, two imposing security guards—either naturally large or enhanced—were checking guests. The guards sported sharp suits and ties, creating a stark contrast to the partygoers, which included Robin Hood, Piglet, and a trio named Jerk, Douche, and Bugsy. It's unclear how one dresses as a jerk or a douche, but somehow they managed. A man also stood patiently in line, clad only in a diaper, presumably for hygiene reasons.”
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
“Winston and Gáben quickly realised that it wouldn’t be ideal for anyone to see Gáben in that outfit. He looked like a stubborn child who didn’t care that his mum had accidentally shrunk his favourite clothes in the wash.”
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
“The buttons were important. There was a time when buttonless clothing had to be developed. The first solution was simple, using velcro to attach separable parts. This arose from a baffling surge in button phobia that led to the banning of buttons. However, that technology quickly fell out of fashion because velcro’s unpleasant sound triggered a new wave of phobias, and it wore out rapidly. Eventually, they developed today’s fabric, which, when properly aligned, self-weaves and fastens invisibly. You can imagine the uproar this caused among button vendors and zipper manufacturers! None at all, since no one dared to question the Future Profit Production Company’s decisions.”
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“Winston and Gáben quickly realised that it wouldn’t be ideal for anyone to see Gáben in that outfit. He looked like a stubborn child who didn’t care that his mum had accidentally shrunk his favourite clothes in the wash.”
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
“What follows is arguably one of the most hated and horrifying moments in the entire modern human experience — an event so universally loathed, so deeply traumatising, that only the extremely fortunate or the terminally unconscious have ever truly escaped it:
An alarm clock chimed.
It didn’t merely beep. It asserted itself, like a bureaucrat with a megaphone and a vendetta against dreams, shattering the delicate peace of sleep with all the subtlety of a marching band in a monastery.”
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
An alarm clock chimed.
It didn’t merely beep. It asserted itself, like a bureaucrat with a megaphone and a vendetta against dreams, shattering the delicate peace of sleep with all the subtlety of a marching band in a monastery.”
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
“Their car was parked elegantly in front of the club. A short line of extravagantly dressed people awaited entry. The door wasn’t automatic; instead, two imposing security guards—either naturally large or enhanced—were checking guests. The guards sported sharp suits and ties, creating a stark contrast to the partygoers, which included Robin Hood, Piglet, and a trio named Jerk, Douche, and Bugsy. It's unclear how one dresses as a jerk or a douche, but somehow they managed. A man also stood patiently in line, clad only in a diaper, presumably for hygiene reasons.”
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
― The Planet That Was Mistaken for a Fool
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