The Hourglass
Network
A feared warlord ignites a chain of extinction-level events, forcing a ruthless CIA officer onto her trail.
Shh.
Mother Nature
came to
collect.
Afghanistan. 2025. A feared warlord and eco-terrorist gives rise to a transformed Earth, as nature violently overtakes every trace of civilization. At the height of a fifth industrial revolution, a detonation triggers the emergence of a new world in a stunningly destructive sequence of events.
The Hourglass Network is a high-stakes spy thriller that weaves together espionage and environmentalism, delivering a haunting cautionary tale that asks: what happens when Earth decides to reclaim its crown?
For fans of Homeland, James Bond, and The Americans. A novel that operates at the intersection of high-octane spycraft and civilizational dread.
Full-length. Every chapter a new theater of operations, every page a tightening of the clock. Winner of the 2025 B.R.A.G. Medallion in the Thrillers category.
Environmental collapse as a weapon. Intelligence tradecraft in an analog world. The question of whether civilization deserved to survive in the first place.
Homeland
meets
The Road
in Kabul.
The paranoid intelligence architecture of a Carrie Mathison operation. The environmental annihilation of a Cormac McCarthy world. The cultural specificity of a story only Andre Soares could tell. The Hourglass Network is not a warning — it is a timeline.
Environmental Collapse
Not as a prop. As narrative engine. As a war cry. A self-fulfilling prophecy following a century of industrial extraction.
Eco-Terrorism
The Hourglass Network redefines the true meaning of terrorism. What follows when foreign belief systems have a sound ideological grounding?
Spycraft & Political Intrigue
Intelligence agencies facing a threat that has no digital signature, no precedent, and no off switch. The last resort is analog — old tradecraft, new stakes.
Esotericism & Power
Behind the geopolitical chessboard, older forces move. What appears to be terrorism may be something far older — and far less containable.

