Ismael Horton thought he would have an easy assignment cataloguing petroglyphs in a remote area in Northern Spain for his graduate work for New York University. It was mostly busy work until the massive object rose from the waters in front of him and. In a matter of seconds young anthropologist’s world was turned upside down, and he was placed dead in the center of the greatest event that humanity has ever witnessed in recent modern history. But he can’t get around investigating the nature of the UFO levitating in front of him because he has to deal with his date trying to assassinate him, the university he is working for denying all knowledge of him, all media outlets suddenly going on total black-out, and wherever he looks there are men in black shooting at him. Things are hinting that Brooking Report of 1960 may have been right, since everyone around him is behaving like the world has come to an end. For three days Ismael gets thrusted into an international cover-up of the highest degree, and his only salvation seems to be at the hand of the rogue covert-ops agent that is trying to keep him alive. This agent guides Ismael not only through the landscape of Spain in their pursue for the truth but also through a myriad of non-orthodox theories and facts (such as Operation Paperclip, Majestic 12, the Dulce Wars and the Pharaonic Chronologies of the Gods-Kings), that suddenly appear to make sense in light of the recent events. Together they will start uncovering a conspiracy the scope of which seems to go back many tens of thousands of years into our past, in a present where nothing is as simple as it seems. “Three days at the end of the Earth” is as 96,000 word sci-fi conspiracy novel that contains double-entenders and hidden symbolism that is aimed at an audience that is interest in OOPARTs, UFO’s and government conspiracies, and its characters give easy to access accounts of existing theories about many unexpliained events, ranging from Atlantis, to
7 parts