An Alternate Version and Fresh Perspective on the End of Atlantis, Rooted in the Era’s Evidence.
WHY did Atlantis sink?
Did it have anything to do with major worldwide events 12,600 years ago? Like:
The end of the Ice Age after 100,000 years.
The oceans rise over 400 feet.
Mass extinctions of large animals across the Northern Hemisphere.
The scarring of the northwest face of every mountain peak across the Northern Hemisphere.
Atlantis Ends is not just a work of fiction. It draws from a variety of sources, including Edgar Cayce’s On Atlantis and David Talbott’s Symbols of an Alien Sky YouTube series, to provide a comprehensive and compelling narrative. But instead of spending weeks studying the evidence (referenced in the back of the novel), Atlantis Ends brings it all together in a fast-paced trilogy.
In Book 3, Atlantis Ends - Worlds Collide:
Forced to flee before they were ready, the Atlantean Fleet is scattered across thousands of miles of space, and each ship struggles to regroup.
After Acton Athu rejoins the Fleet, the solar system comes apart and the Fleet must take evasive action to avoid planets and moons colliding with each other, throwing the universe into chaos. To prevent a ten-thousand-year trek to find a new home planet, Acton must make one last desperate voyage into a debris field larger than Jupiter.
While the Fleet struggles to survive a solar system gone amuck, Pal Athu’s friends help the L.E.T. track down the insurrectionists to find Pal.
Atlantis Ends is a fast-paced, action-packed, end-of-the-world saga of young love amidst planetary catastrophe, rebellion, intrigue, natural disasters, and desperate battles against overwhelming odds.
"Science fiction lies in the land of what-ifs. Paul Hillman takes on a big one. Inspired by Talbott and Cayce, Hillman has created an enormous canvas of what could have been. An action-filled story full of end-of-the-world dangers and the desperate struggle to survive." John E. Stith, author of Manhattan Transfer, Pushback, and other novels.