The Einstein Prophecy
by Robert Masello
About This Book
Set against the chaos of World War II, The Einstein Prophecy drops readers into a collision of ancient mystery and modern catastrophe. When a young army lieutenant recovers a sealed Egyptian sarcophagus and ships it to Princeton for study, what emerges from that box threatens to reshape the war's outcome — and something far larger. Robert Masello builds his premise on a genuinely seductive question: what if the supernatural and the scientific weren't opposites, but two sides of the same terrifying coin? The stakes feel both intimate and apocalyptic, grounded in a specific historical moment that makes the impossible feel plausible.
Masello writes with the pacing of someone who understands how to keep pages turning without sacrificing atmosphere. The Princeton setting gives the novel an unusual texture — ivy-league libraries and wartime urgency make for an odd, effective combination — and Einstein's cameo role is handled with enough restraint to feel earned rather than gimmicky. The dual-protagonist structure keeps the mystery from collapsing in on itself too quickly, and Masello's background in journalism shows in the clean, propulsive prose. This is the kind of historical thriller that moves fast but leaves you thinking about it after.