The Eternal Frontier
Forgotten Chronicles from America's Hidden History | Book 5
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Adrian Cave
This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
Beneath the America we know — the America of textbooks, monuments, and official records — lies another country entirely. A country where construction workers discover self-building chambers beneath the U.S. Capitol. Where farming communities in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley pay a terrible tithe to an ancient forest every ten years. Where passengers vanish from trains crossing Wyoming and reappear holding tickets dated decades in the future.
The Eternal Frontier presents twelve standalone chronicles drawn from the hidden margins of American history, spanning from the lost colonies of the 1500s to the sealed archives of Harvard in 1906. Each story follows ordinary people — journalists, librarians, professors, railroad conductors, homesteaders — who stumbled across phenomena that defied every rational explanation they possessed. They did the only thing they could. They wrote it down.
A mathematician builds a mansion in Rhode Island whose geometry becomes impossible to navigate, trapping a visitor who ages fifty years in three days. A journalist witnessing prison executions discovers that the condemned speak prophecies in their final moments — predictions that prove terrifyingly accurate. A secret society in New York City preserves the names of people who have been deliberately erased from history by forces no one can identify. A scholar at Harvard finds an index of every book that was never written, including his own — along with the date of his death.
These are not ghost stories. They are testimonies.
Each chronicle is meticulously constructed as a self-contained narrative, perfect for reading in a single sitting or listening during a long drive. Together, they form something larger: a portrait of a nation built on foundations far stranger than its citizens were ever allowed to know.
The frontier was never closed. It merely shifted — from geography to chronology, from space to time, from the edges of the map to the spaces between the walls.
The Eternal Frontier is Book Five in the Forgotten Chronicles series. Each chronicle stands alone. No prior reading is required. But be warned: once you see the pattern, you cannot unsee it.
What waits on the other side of the possible?
Turn the page. The frontier is open.
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