HISTORY
From ancient to modern times, intriguing stories of secrets, suspicion, and hidden motives, where memory and truth collide, and every clue draws readers deeper into the shadows of character, consequence, and unexpected human revelation slowly.
Ancient History
The discovery of an underwater city off the west coast of India, carbon-dated to more than 9,000 years ago, has shaken the very core of the Abrahamic religions. The artefact points to the legendary submerged city of Dvārakā, once ruled by the mythical warrior-king Krishna. Determined to uncover its secrets, Anya, along with her quick-witted sidekick Zed, embarks on a perilous adventure to unravel the mysteries of the fabled city and reveal the truth behind its sudden disappearance into the ocean’s depths thousands of years ago.
From the bustling streets of Lima to the treacherous peaks of the Andes, Peruvian Paradox is a high-octane thriller that fuses historical intrigue with pulse-pounding action. In the heart of the Peruvian jungle lies a secret that could rewrite the origins of human civilisation—the original, unaltered Popol Vuh, a sacred text revealing truths lost to time. When ancient history professor Dr Anya Grover stumbles upon evidence of its existence, she becomes the target of the world’s most powerful forces. The Abrahamic faith leaders, fearing the book’s revelations could shatter the foundations of their religions, will stop at nothing to ensure it never sees the light of day. Anya has only one person she can trust—Zed Cohen, a hardened ex-Special Ops and Navy SEAL operative with a shadowy past. Together, they must navigate the deadly labyrinth of Peruvian ruins, escape relentless mercenaries, and decipher cryptic clues hidden in the ancient world’s most enigmatic texts.
FORGOTTEN GOD – The Untold Story is a gripping geopolitical thriller and a philosophical adventure through time. When whispers emerge of the original Avesta—the ancient scripture of Zoroastrianism—Anya Grover, a brilliant scholar of lost languages, is thrust into a deadly quest. Hired by the Vatican and drawn by mysterious clues left by her estranged father, Dr Sameer Grover, Anya races to uncover a revelation that could dismantle centuries of religious dogma and avert a looming conflict between Iran and the United States. As she journeys from the deserts of Iran to the sacred caves of Kashmir—joined by her father, a rogue CIA defector, and the enigmatic Zed Cohen—Anya must outwit betrayal, survive assassination attempts, and piece together a spiritual legacy older than any religion we know.
Inspired by the true events of an Indian royal princess who worked behind the enemy lines as a spy for Britain during WW II. This book is researched in Berlin and through discussions with historians to add depth to a truly remarkable story of courage and freedom. The Indian royal princess, Noor Inayat Khan, was the firstborn of a Sufi mystic who influenced many lives with his teachings, including Rasputin, Tolstoy’s son, Mata Hari, Gandhi and Nehru. She risked her life to prove that Indians were courageous and capable of managing their own country. She wanted freedom for India and was committed to delivering it and, in the process, saved millions of lives.
It was Subhas Chandra Bose—not Gandhi—who truly ignited India’s independence. Yet history was rewritten to glorify the convenient and bury the inconvenient. But what if the dead returned to reveal the truth? Declared dead in a 1945 plane crash, Bose resurfaces in India in 1962. For seventeen secret years, the man the British feared most has been working across continents—drawing on his wartime ties with Hitler, Mussolini, Perón, and Hirohito to craft a new alliance with Stalin, Mao, Ho Chi Minh, and the Dalai Lama. His goal: to reshape Asia and reclaim India’s destiny. The Man Who Wouldn’t Die rips open India’s greatest political cover-up. It blends meticulous research with cinematic pace, exposing betrayal, courage, and the rewriting of a nation’s story.
A fast-paced historical thriller about ink, empire, and the long relay of freedom, THE PARIS NOTES asks: Who gets to write history—and what happens when the people start writing back? In Paris, 1848, the barricades fall—and a small red notebook survives. In its margins are dangerous ideas: rights, representation, limits on power. Smuggled across fogbound rivers and watched ports, THE PARIS NOTES begins as a relic of Europe’s failed revolutions… and becomes a fuse in a far larger empire. A decade later, India is tightening under Company rule. In Calcutta. In the shadows, a British telegraph strategist and a smiling fixer hunt the one thing they fear most: a sentence that can’t be unlearned. Delhi teeters between law and vengeance. As the uprising is crushed, the notebook’s true power is revealed: it doesn’t need to win in 1857 to shape what finally arrives in 1947.
Based on real events and real people, THE SILENT FRONT is a fast-paced historical thriller about espionage that permanently rewired a nation. It reveals how one defection did more than expose a spy ring—it helped push Canada into the Cold War. In Ottawa, September 1945, the war has barely ended when a young Soviet cypher clerk walks into the night carrying more than stolen paper—proof that a wartime ally has been quietly building a network inside Canada’s own corridors. Within hours, the RCMP moves him, his wife Anna, and their small child into the shadow world of safe houses, cover names, and rules that change without warning: don’t answer the phone, don’t open the door, don’t exist. The country faces a choice it has never had to make so openly: protect itself without becoming the very thing it fears.
Empires no longer rise with armies or fall with borders. They rise silently—through code, data, and algorithms. While the world debates whether America, China, or India will dominate the future, power has already slipped its old restraints. It now moves through cloud servers, recommendation engines, digital currencies, surveillance systems, and artificial intelligence—shaping what we see, what we buy, what we believe, and ultimately, how we are governed. THE INVISIBLE CROWN is a gripping, fact-based exploration of the greatest power shift in human history. Drawing on real geopolitical trends, emerging technologies, and documented manoeuvrings by technocrats, platforms, and policymakers, it reveals how authority is migrating away from nation-states toward unseen digital architectures. If algorithms rule the future, who holds them accountable—and who wears the crown?
Empires rise proclaiming destiny. They fall insisting on inevitability. Between those two lies a story few dare to tell. From ancient thrones to modern superpowers, history has been carefully edited—victors celebrated, failures excused, and collapse reframed as transition. Power rarely admits decay. Instead, it rewrites its own ending, blaming chance, enemies, or fate while ignoring the patterns that doom every empire before it. The Vanishing Empires is a sweeping, provocative journey across millennia—tracing how authority consolidates, how arrogance hardens into policy, and how control ultimately corrodes from within. From classical civilisations to modern global powers, this book exposes the recurring cycle of dominance, denial, and decline.
Historical Fiction