The world has ended.
What followed was not silence, but continuation. Roads still lead somewhere. People still gather. Old words still carry weight, even after the structures that gave them meaning have collapsed.
John moves through what's left, carrying a past that refuses to stay buried. Kyra tries to hold onto something fragile in a landscape that rewards endurance more than mercy. Their lives intersect without design, in a world where endurance is mistaken for virtue and survival offers no absolution.
Alexandria's Genesis is a post-collapse novel concerned with what people hold onto when everything else is stripped away. Persistence replaces hope. Memory endures as burden, shaping who people become when there are no longer clear answers.
This is not a story about the end of the world.
It is about what continues-and the cost of allowing it to continue.