Exodus
Prodigal Project • Book 2
by Ken Abraham, Daniel Hart
Why You'll Love This
The world after the Rapture isn't peaceful — it's a power vacuum, and someone ruthless is already moving to fill it.
- Great if you want: faith-based thriller blending end-times prophecy with geopolitical conflict
- The experience: fast-moving and urgent, with a shifting ensemble cast under pressure
- The writing: Abraham and Hart favor plot momentum over introspection — lean and direct
- Skip if: you haven't read book one — context is essential here
About This Book
In the chaotic aftermath of the Rapture, the world's familiar order has collapsed—and into that vacuum steps something far more dangerous than grief or confusion. Exodus follows ordinary people thrust into extraordinary circumstances as a powerful Islamic mujahideen movement moves to seize control of weakened Western nations. The stakes are civilizational, but the story never loses sight of the human cost: individuals wrestling with faith, survival, and the terrifying question of what—and who—is worth fighting for when the ground has shifted beneath everything they believed.
What distinguishes Exodus as the second installment in the Prodigal Project series is its willingness to expand the scope without losing narrative momentum. Ken Abraham and Daniel Hart weave political tension with personal reckoning, keeping the geopolitical backdrop grounded through characters whose choices carry genuine weight. The pacing moves with urgency, and the authors resist the temptation to simplify their antagonists into cardboard threats—the conflict feels lived-in and layered. Readers who came for the premise will stay for the human stories threaded through the turbulence.