Early Reviewers
The Empire erased the mountain first.
On official maps, Uchiza does not exist. Its name has been scraped from survey sheets, its place buried beneath corrected records, revised histories, and the polished lies of imperial order. But when scholar Moria Chione receives word that a missing expedition may have discovered something impossible in the north, she is pulled toward a mystery the state has already begun to suffocate. What begins with stolen notes, vanished colleagues, and a trail of censored reports becomes a journey into a landscape where knowledge itself is under surveillance.
Beyond the last safe roads, Moria and her companions find Uchiza: a mountain that should not be there, and a cave that behaves less like a ruin than a system already aware of their intrusion. Its walls bear impossible inscriptions. Its chambers depict a world older than any accepted history. Stone seems worked by no known hand. Light bends wrongly. Air pressure fails to match visible space. And in its vast reliefs and hidden records lies evidence that human civilization may not be the first power to rise, conquer, and bury the truth beneath monuments, doctrine, and fear.
Most of them do not come back out.
Moria survives with fragments: a scorched satchel, a broken calliper, a dead man’s letter, and the knowledge that silence would finish the Empire’s work for it. Because the deeper she looks, the more she begins to understand that Uchiza is not merely an archaeological discovery. It is a witness. A record of recurrence. A warning carved across deep time. Feathered dragons, impossible engines, vanished civilizations, and powers older than memory all cast their shadows through the cave’s shifting testimony. What was dismissed as myth may in fact be history too terrible to preserve openly.
Now Moria must decide what it means to tell the truth in a world built to erase it. Reports can be sealed. Archives can be corrected. Witnesses can disappear. But once a story escapes into the world, it can become harder to kill than any person who carries it.
The Cave of Past and Present is a dark epic fantasy of buried records, imperial violence, lost civilizations, ancient technology mistaken for myth, and the unbearable cost of remembering. Blending archaeological mystery, political intrigue, cosmic dread, and mythic fantasy, it opens The Echoes Saga with a story about what power destroys, what memory preserves, and what waits in the dark when history refuses to stay buried.
- Media
- Ebook
- Genres
- Fantasy, Science Fiction, Fiction and Literature
- Length
- 201-300 pages
- Offered by
- boris1889 (Author)
- Published by
- The New Appalachian Workshop
- Batch
- June 2026 Ends: 2026-06-25, 06:00 PM EDT
- On Sale
- 2026-05-01
- Countries
- Available in all countries
- Links
- Book Information
LibraryThing Work Page
Thank you for considering The Cave of Past and Present.
This is a fantasy novella about memory, empire, buried histories, and the dangerous places where myth and deep time overlap. The story follows characters drawn into the shadow of an ancient cave, where the past is not gone, the present is not safe, and the old powers beneath the world still have teeth.
Readers who enjoy archaeological mystery, morally complicated fantasy, ancient ruins, lost civilizations, and stories shaped by history’s long echo may find something here.
Review copies are provided for honest reader response. No positive review is expected or required.

