REVENANT 6: THE COMPLETE NOVEL - A ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE OF GNOSTIC CONSPIRACYBrace yourself for a relentless sci-fi horror thriller where zombies, spiritual warfare, and Gnostic conspiracy collide!
Revenant 6: The Complete Novel gathers the entire Korean Peninsula Anomaly into one explosive zombie apocalypse story. An American soldier on leave, a biochemist steeped in occult science, and a resourceful high school student share one grim bond—they survived the outbreak. Through classified recordings and firsthand testimony, their stories expose a nightmare of bloodthirsty “again-walkers,” forbidden biotechnology, and a shadowy corporation entangled with ancient religious orders. As the dead rise and civilization fractures, a deeper truth emerges: this apocalypse isn’t random. It’s engineered—and rooted in forbidden spiritual knowledge. Why did the outbreak begin on the Korean Peninsula? What links a powerful tech company to secret Gnostic beliefs and occult experimentation? And how much must be sacrificed to survive a zombie apocalypse driven by conspiracy and faith? Perfect for fans of zombie apocalypse novels, sci-fi horror, occult conspiracy thrillers, and spiritual warfare fiction, Revenant 6 blends survival horror with philosophical dread and end-times terror. If you enjoyed I Am Legend by Richard Matheson or The Stand by Stephen King, this zombie apocalypse novel of Gnostic conspiracy will keep you turning pages long after the world ends. Includes all five episodes of the original Revenant 6 serial, now presented as a single, complete novel. Behind the Scenes: If you'd like to see what went into the writing of Revenant 6: The Korean Peninsula Anomaly click here. AUTHOR: CHRISTOPHER KRAMER FICTION: HORROR / SCIENCE FICTION / OCCULT / SPIRITUAL WARFARE / METAPHYSICAL & VISIONARY ASIN: B0GD33S5W6 ISBN: 9798241871299 PRINT LENGTH: 336 PAGES |
IT WOULDN'T LET ME GO"The idea for this serial came to me during my first year in South Korea. Someone casually mentioned that, by law, civilians couldn’t own guns, and I remember being struck as an American—how could a society exist without that basic assumption of self-defense? An image formed in my mind: a zombie story set in Korea, where firepower was impossible, leaving the characters vulnerable in various ways. This was years before 'Train to Busan,' and yet the idea lodged itself in the back of my mind. Over time, I would revisit it, imagining different scenarios, testing ideas, and pondering what survival might look like in a world so constrained by law and culture. Then the pandemic arrived, and suddenly the concept took on new urgency. I found myself reading obsessively about vaccinations and nanotechnology. Abstract ideas crystallized into something more elaborate. Eleven years after that first spark, all the pieces came together—an unlikely convergence of circumstance."
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