The Atlantis Code
Thomas Lourds • Book 1
by Charles Brokaw
About This Book
When satellite imagery reveals impossible ruins along the Spanish coast, Harvard linguist Thomas Lourds recognizes what the world isn't ready to believe: Atlantis has been found. What follows is a breakneck race across continents, with an ultrasecret Vatican faction, ruthless rivals, and Lourds himself all converging on a discovery that promises to rewrite human history from the ground up. The stakes aren't just archaeological — whoever controls what's buried beneath those ruins holds leverage over the story humanity tells about itself.
Brokaw structures this as a propulsive page-turner that leans hard into its pulpy pleasures: a globe-trotting protagonist with more charm than caution, conspiracies layered inside conspiracies, and set pieces that keep the tension ratcheting forward. The prose is built for speed rather than contemplation, which suits the material — this is a book that wants to be devoured in long sittings, not savored slowly. Fans of Dan Brown's puzzle-box thrillers will find familiar rhythms here, but Brokaw's grounding in linguistics gives Lourds a specific, credible expertise that makes the ancient-mystery angle feel earned rather than decorative.