Journals Log In | Journals Account Info

Books Cart  
Journals Cart  
 
 
SEARCH
  
Browse Books

Cooking Sale
Browse Bestsellers
Browse Bargain Books


UNP Nobel Prize Winner
New November Books
UNP on Facebook

View Our New Seasonal Catalog (pdf)
The Lost Continent, The Lost Continent, 0803273320, 0-8032-7332-0, 978-0-8032-7332-0, 9780803273320, C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne Introduction by Harry Turtledove Afterword by Gary Hoppenstand, Bison Frontiers of Imagination, The Lost Continent, 0803208014, 0-8032-0801-4, 978-0-8032-0801-8, 9780803208018, C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne Introduction by Harry Turtledove Afterword by Gary Hoppenstand, Bison Frontiers of Imaginatio

The Lost Continent
The Story of Atlantis
C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne
Introduction by Harry Turtledove
Afterword by Gary Hoppenstand

paperback
2002. 259 pp.
Illus
978-0-8032-7332-0
$14.95 $3.74 t
 
Use code SALE75 at checkout.

The finest tale ever written of fabled Atlantis, The Lost Continent is a sweeping, fiery saga of the last days of the doomed land. Atlantis, at the height of its power and glory, is without equal. It has established far-flung colonies in Egypt and Central America, and its mighty navies patrol the seas. The priests of Atlantis channel the elemental powers of the universe, and a powerful monarch rules from a staggeringly beautiful city of pyramids and shining temples clustered around a sacred mountain.
 
Mighty Atlantis is also decaying and corrupt. Its people are growing soft and decadent, and many live in squalor. Rebellion is in the air, and prophecies of doom ring forth. Into this epic drama of the end of time stride two memorable characters: the warrior-priest Deucalion, stern, just, and loyal, and the Empress Phorenice, brilliant, ambitious, and passionate. The old and new Atlantis collide in a titanic showdown between Deucalion and Phorenice, a struggle that soon affects the destiny of an entire civilization.

C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne (1866–1944) was a popular novelist, author of the "Captain Kettle" adventures. Harry Turtledove, a winner of the Hugo Award, is the author of such novels as How Few Remain and Guns of the South. Gary Hoppenstand is a professor of American thought and language at Michigan State University. He is the author of Clive Barker's Short Stories: Imagination as Metaphor in the Books of Blood and Other Works and the editor of Popular Fiction: An Anthology, which won the Popular Culture Association's National Book Award.

Also of Interest

At the Earth's Core
Edgar Rice Burroughs


Omega
Camille Flammarion


Disappearance
Philip Wylie


Absolute at Large
Karel Capek