Two volumes on the civilization that wrote the future down — the twelve codes the tablets encoded about what happens next, and the seven times the wheel turned. Written plainly. Catalog numbers cited. Yours forever.
These books were not written to entertain you.
The Sumerians were the most precisely documented civilization of the ancient world. They kept meticulous records — astronomy, trade, law, war — and when they described something, they described it with the accuracy of engineers. Both volumes work the same way: the passage, the tablet's catalog number, the translation on record, the physical evidence beside it — and the question left standing. You decide what it means. But read it first.
Civilization has ended seven times, and the Sumerians recorded every one — by fire, by cold, by water, by drought, by dust, by war, by darkness. This volume reconstructs all seven in order and matches each against the physical record: the ice cores, the sediment, the tree rings, the flood stratum at Ur, the year 1177 BCE, the eighteen dim months of 536 CE. Then it does the thing the tablets were written for — it reads the checklist for the eighth against the present. It is not a series of accidents. It is a schedule.
Five thousand years ago the Sumerians encoded the future into clay — cycles that repeat, events that return, a timeline still unfolding. Twelve codes drawn from catalogued tablets in London, Istanbul, and Philadelphia, decoded against the historical record and modern astronomical data: the Return Cycle, the Great Flood Sequence, the Seven Kings Before the Flood, the Underground Cities, the Final King — and the Date. They did not write in metaphor. They wrote with the accuracy of engineers.
The twelve codes and the seven resets are two halves of the same record: what the tablets said would happen, and how many times it already has. Get both volumes together and read the whole wheel.
"I expected hype and got catalog numbers — VAT 7847, the Weld-Blundell Prism — things I could look up myself. I looked them up. Then I sat quietly for a while."
"The Seven Resets kept me up past two. Fire, cold, water, drought — and the ice cores landing right where the tablets said the wheel turned. The checklist chapter I read twice."
"Started with the Codes, bought the Resets the same night — they really are two halves of one record. Whatever you decide about the conclusions, the translations alone are worth it."
They are investigations, not textbooks. Each file lays out documents, passages, photographs, and research — cited where it counts — and tells you plainly where the mainstream account differs. You are trusted to weigh the evidence yourself. That is why the Chamber exists.
Each volume stands alone — but they are two halves of one record. The Codes tell you what the tablets said would happen; the Resets tell you how many times it already has. The $11.99 set gives you the whole wheel.
Instantly, as beautifully typeset PDFs — on your phone, tablet, or printed. Buy a file tonight and you'll be reading it five minutes from now.
Because the Store grows. A reader who spends ten dollars and gets their money's worth comes back for the next volume — and there will always be a next volume. Both together are $11.99.