Download Hidden Gods: The Doorway AudioBook Free
Hidden Gods: The Doorway is a metaphysical thriller where two journalists, so that they can discover who or what is absolutely behind the chaos in the Middle East, spin back through time to find the secret rules of Atlantis. Their search for the grail begins with a nighttime in the King's Chamber of the fantastic Pyramid of Giza... International media shooter Hugo Fitzroy, his schizophrenic son Brent and writer Phillipa Neville, have one vision in keeping - a great pyramid through whose portal shines a huge sunbeam. Inside, a miraculous get away from is planned. Outdoor, planet earth is changing rate of recurrence. Against a track record of the international intrigue encircling the Gulf Conflict and its aftermath, the visionary trio not only find that these are being attracted inexorably towards the greatest secret the center East has ever before placed, but also towards their own destinies. For Hugo, Brent and Phillipa have cherished before, in other powerful identities, and now they have come to conditions with this as well as their obligations to the concealed gods. Anthony Masters is the writer of eleven works of adult fiction - notably, Conquering Heroes (1969), Red Snow (1986, with Nicholas Barker), The Men (1997), The Good and Faithful Servant (1999) and Lifers (2001) - and, prior to his death, was in the process of completing another, Deep Bridges, which he thought would be his best. Several works carry deep insights into cultural problems that he gained, over four ages, by helping the socially excluded, whether it is by jogging soup kitchens for drug addicts or by campaigning for the civic rights of gypsies and other ethnic minorities. Masters is also known for his eclectic selection of non-fiction game titles. It ranged from the biographies of such diverse personalities as Hannah Senesh (THE SUMMERTIME that Bled, 1972), Mikhail Bakunin (Bakunin: the daddy of Anarchism, 1974), Nancy Astor (Nancy Astor: A Life, 1981) and the English secret service main immortalized by Ian Fleming in his Wayne Bond books (The Man Who Was M: the Life of Maxwell Knight, 1984), to a history of the notorious asylum Bedlam (Bedlam, 1977).