Again

About

When Mars dies, its legacy does not.

In Again, visionary author Myk Hubbell unveils a sweeping codex of discovery and consequence that spans worlds, centuries, and civilizations. From the crimson storms of a collapsing Martian sky to the dust‑etched Rift Valley of Africa, from the coded jungles of the Amazon to the frozen silence of the Arctic, humanity unearths artifacts that pulse with memory—and warnings.

Dr. Jonathan Thorne and his team of explorers uncover crystalline nodules that do more than record history: they revise it. Each relic hums with recursion, projecting fragments of a Martian civilization that fled extinction and left behind a map of survival. But as the nodes awaken, the Earth itself begins to respond—forests that measure, rivers that remember, skies that whisper.

What begins as archaeology becomes reckoning. The artifacts are not passive. They are watching. Measuring. Calling.

Blending cinematic description with codex‑like recursion, Again is a novel of inheritance and ambiguity—where the line between psychosis and paranormal, science and scripture, survival and surrender blurs into living archive. For readers of speculative fiction, cosmic mystery, and immersive world‑building, this is not just a story. It is a warning. And it has already begun.