Why You'll Love This
The reset bought humanity one more shot — now the question is whether anyone survives long enough to use it.
- Great if you want: a trilogy payoff with high-stakes twists and real consequences
- The experience: relentless and escalating — multiple POVs converging toward one desperate endgame
- The writing: Cole balances military thriller momentum with science-fiction scope across split storylines
- Skip if: you haven't read books one and two — this does not stand alone
About This Book
The end of the world is hard enough to survive once. In Amplitude, the final chapter of Dean M. Cole's Dimension Space trilogy, Angela and Vaughn face something crueler — the knowledge that the apocalypse isn't finished with humanity yet. With the catastrophic event threatening to repeat itself, the last survivors must fight across separate fronts, find each other against impossible odds, and then decide whether they have the strength — and the ingenuity — to permanently close the door on annihilation. The stakes are as large as stakes get, but Cole keeps the emotional weight personal, making the survival of two people feel as urgent as the survival of an entire species.
What carries Amplitude across its 500-plus pages is Cole's instinct for momentum. He structures the dual storylines with a thriller's sense of timing, cutting between them at precisely the moments when tension is highest. The prose stays lean and purposeful — no wasted motion — while still delivering genuine character investment. Readers who have followed this trilogy from the beginning will find the conclusion earns its ambition, paying off threads without telegraphing them. This is apocalyptic fiction that trusts its audience to keep up.