Könyv The Grand Inheritance Chris Cathey

The Grand Inheritance

A 300-Year Project to Build an Immortal Civilization

Szerző: Chris Cathey
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Várható készletfeltöltés
Küldés 07. 07. 2026
7 207 Ft
The Grand Inheritance is a sweeping speculative novel about a civilization built to survive the olde...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
174
EAN
9798185257531
Enbook ID
53199948
Súly
191
Méretek
140 x 216 x 11

Teljes leírás

The Grand Inheritance is a sweeping speculative novel about a civilization built to survive the oldest failure in human history: forgetting what destroys us.

In Geneva, in the year 2141, Dara Osei gathers a small group of scholars, soldiers, scientists, engineers, and moral thinkers around a private dinner table. Each of them has seen institutions fail. Each of them knows that collapse does not arrive because people lack intelligence. It arrives because people look away from truths too uncomfortable to govern by.

Their answer becomes the Inheritance Project: a 300-year attempt to build an immortal civilization. Its founders create archives that cannot be quietly altered, rites that bind generations to memory, fitness standards that refuse weakness, and a governing order designed around the hard realities of hierarchy, scarcity, biology, power, and human nature.

But every solution carries a danger.

The Archive preserves truth, but truth can become control. The Guardian Tier makes power visible, but visible power can still become permanent. The rites create meaning, but meaning built on purpose can begin to feel manufactured. As generations pass and Earth itself becomes only the origin point of a larger human future, the civilization Dara helped build must face the question at the center of its existence:

Can humanity survive its own nature without becoming something colder than human?

Moving across centuries, from the founding generation to the edge of interstellar expansion, The Grand Inheritance is a novel of memory, sacrifice, governance, faith, conflict, and the terrible cost of building something meant to outlive everyone who begins it.

For readers who enjoy ambitious speculative fiction, civilizational drama, political philosophy, and stories about humanity's long future, this is a novel about what must be remembered if civilization is ever going to endure.

The description matches the manuscript's core premise: a 300-year project to build an immortal civilization through memory, discipline, governance, and hard truth.