![]() ![]() This is clearly a book for young adults, given that most of its primary characters are all of the high school age, and yet this book doesn’t speak down to anyone. Naturally it is revealed that he is also Atlantean, but his true destiny has greater significance than even he realizes, and that’s when everything goes out of control. He learns that there is an Atlantis, or at least there was, and its people still survive to this day. While they are vacationing they encounter a group of not so nice people, and young Max is rescued by some other equally mysterious people who claim to be on his side, and right after that his world, as he knows it, is totally turned upside down and inside out. ![]() His parents are very loving towards him, and are of the academia type. He’s actually painfully average, except for an aptitude for running track, despite having bouts with asthma. He’s a bit of a nerd, but not so much that he sticks out. He’s quite the average high school student. The story introduces us to a young man named Maximus Hunt, or Max for short. Even in books we see the popularity of Atlantis and its mythology figure in to books, most recently with KD Edwards The Last Sun, and now we have a series of books by Perry Covington titled Child Of Atlantis, and his first book is simply named “Ascension.” From movies to TV shows, the use of Atlantis as some sort of backdrop for a story continues to stimulate and tantalize both reader and writer alike. Stories of people from Atlantis have been somewhat commonplace for quite a long time. ![]()
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