The Wrath of Olympus, K D Wildman (9798349542947) — Readings Books

Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier. Sign in or sign up for free!

Become a Readings Member. Sign in or sign up for free!

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre to view your orders, change your details, or view your lists, or sign out.

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre or sign out.

The Wrath of Olympus
Paperback

The Wrath of Olympus

$79.99
Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to your wishlist.

This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.

For centuries, the mighty gods of Olympus lay silent, their temples crumbling to ruins, their altars gathering dust. Once feared and adored, they became nothing more than fables retold to children, names scattered across textbooks, and marble statues admired by tourists with cameras. Humanity, secure in its mastery of science and technology, declared the divine irrelevant. The thunderbolts of Zeus were explained by meteorology; the wisdom of Athena reduced to metaphors. Olympus had been forgotten.

Yet beneath Mount Olympus, where stone meets sky and legend lingers in every cavern, an ancient awareness never fully died. It slept, restless, its dreams darkened by neglect, its fury fed by centuries of silence. And when the modern world committed one final insult, that ancient consciousness stirred.

The insult came as a NATO military exercise-an orchestrated show of power staged at the very foot of the sacred mountain. Tanks crushed the earth, helicopters thundered overhead, and explosions shattered the once-holy ground. For the soldiers, it was routine. For Olympus, it was desecration. In that instant, Zeus, King of the Gods, awakened. His fury was not symbolic-it was the storm itself, a primal wrath long restrained. Lightning carved the sky, the mountain shook, and Olympus was alive again.

The consequences were swift and catastrophic. Across the globe, inexplicable phenomena began to unfold. Oceans rose with monstrous force, birthing tsunamis that drowned coasts without warning. Plagues spread with uncanny precision, striking cities immune to known diseases. Lightning storms erupted in cloudless skies, their bolts scorching skyscrapers and silencing satellites. Humanity-so confident in its dominion-realized it was powerless before the will of gods who demanded remembrance.

Amid this chaos stands Dr. Elena Petrakis, a classics professor in Athens. For years, her colleagues had dismissed her as eccentric, her theories about mythology little more than academic curiosity. She believed myths held hidden truths, that Olympus was never entirely gone. Laughed at, ignored, and even pitied, she carried on her work in solitude. Now, as the impossible becomes reality, she is thrust from obscurity to prominence. The world that mocked her must now listen.

When Zeus issues his ultimatum-resume proper worship or face divine annihilation-the governments of the world splinter. Some leaders, desperate for survival, whisper of appeasement. Others, armed with nuclear fire, dream of resistance. Fear ripples through the masses: churches, mosques, and temples overflow with frantic prayers; scientists scramble to explain the unexplainable. In the eye of this storm, Elena becomes an unlikely bridge between two worlds: mortal reason and divine power.

But Zeus's fury is only the beginning. From the deepest fissures of creation, a far older threat emerges. Cronus, father of Zeus and master of time itself, stirs from his eternal prison. Once cast down by his son, he returns with hunger not for worship but for vengeance. His power warps reality itself-time bends, past and future collide, and the very fabric of existence unravels. Against such a force, gods and mortals alike stand equally fragile.

In this desperate hour, enemies must set aside pride. Elena finds an unexpected ally in Athena, the goddess of wisdom and war. Their partnership is uneasy-one forged from necessity, strained by centuries of mistrust between gods and mortals. Yet together they uncover a profound truth: neither divine timelessness nor human ingenuity is enough alone. To survive Cronus's awakening, they must weave the strengths of both into something greater.

Their journey will span battlefields where gods clash with machines, halls of power where terrified leaders gamble with the fate of nations, and realms beyond mortal comprehension where time itself fractures. Along the way,

Read More
In Shop
Out of stock
Shipping & Delivery

$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout

MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
K. D. Wildman
Date
1 October 2025
Pages
492
ISBN
9798349542947

This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.

For centuries, the mighty gods of Olympus lay silent, their temples crumbling to ruins, their altars gathering dust. Once feared and adored, they became nothing more than fables retold to children, names scattered across textbooks, and marble statues admired by tourists with cameras. Humanity, secure in its mastery of science and technology, declared the divine irrelevant. The thunderbolts of Zeus were explained by meteorology; the wisdom of Athena reduced to metaphors. Olympus had been forgotten.

Yet beneath Mount Olympus, where stone meets sky and legend lingers in every cavern, an ancient awareness never fully died. It slept, restless, its dreams darkened by neglect, its fury fed by centuries of silence. And when the modern world committed one final insult, that ancient consciousness stirred.

The insult came as a NATO military exercise-an orchestrated show of power staged at the very foot of the sacred mountain. Tanks crushed the earth, helicopters thundered overhead, and explosions shattered the once-holy ground. For the soldiers, it was routine. For Olympus, it was desecration. In that instant, Zeus, King of the Gods, awakened. His fury was not symbolic-it was the storm itself, a primal wrath long restrained. Lightning carved the sky, the mountain shook, and Olympus was alive again.

The consequences were swift and catastrophic. Across the globe, inexplicable phenomena began to unfold. Oceans rose with monstrous force, birthing tsunamis that drowned coasts without warning. Plagues spread with uncanny precision, striking cities immune to known diseases. Lightning storms erupted in cloudless skies, their bolts scorching skyscrapers and silencing satellites. Humanity-so confident in its dominion-realized it was powerless before the will of gods who demanded remembrance.

Amid this chaos stands Dr. Elena Petrakis, a classics professor in Athens. For years, her colleagues had dismissed her as eccentric, her theories about mythology little more than academic curiosity. She believed myths held hidden truths, that Olympus was never entirely gone. Laughed at, ignored, and even pitied, she carried on her work in solitude. Now, as the impossible becomes reality, she is thrust from obscurity to prominence. The world that mocked her must now listen.

When Zeus issues his ultimatum-resume proper worship or face divine annihilation-the governments of the world splinter. Some leaders, desperate for survival, whisper of appeasement. Others, armed with nuclear fire, dream of resistance. Fear ripples through the masses: churches, mosques, and temples overflow with frantic prayers; scientists scramble to explain the unexplainable. In the eye of this storm, Elena becomes an unlikely bridge between two worlds: mortal reason and divine power.

But Zeus's fury is only the beginning. From the deepest fissures of creation, a far older threat emerges. Cronus, father of Zeus and master of time itself, stirs from his eternal prison. Once cast down by his son, he returns with hunger not for worship but for vengeance. His power warps reality itself-time bends, past and future collide, and the very fabric of existence unravels. Against such a force, gods and mortals alike stand equally fragile.

In this desperate hour, enemies must set aside pride. Elena finds an unexpected ally in Athena, the goddess of wisdom and war. Their partnership is uneasy-one forged from necessity, strained by centuries of mistrust between gods and mortals. Yet together they uncover a profound truth: neither divine timelessness nor human ingenuity is enough alone. To survive Cronus's awakening, they must weave the strengths of both into something greater.

Their journey will span battlefields where gods clash with machines, halls of power where terrified leaders gamble with the fate of nations, and realms beyond mortal comprehension where time itself fractures. Along the way,

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
K. D. Wildman
Date
1 October 2025
Pages
492
ISBN
9798349542947