Framed by a cosmic wager between the Lady and the Archon, Logos weaves epic romance through the fabric of history. At once playful and profound, it asks whether love can survive the disguises of time—and whether the human story might yet turn toward renewal.
(Publisher's note: Early release of a work in progress.)
Michael Susko is an independent scholar and writer whose work bridges cosmology, biology, archaeology, and history with literary imagination. He has published across multiple fields, from evolutionary theory and Neolithic studies to cultural history and symbolic anthropology. His creative vision unfolds in parallel through epics (Cosmos, Bios, Mythos, Logos) and companion opuses of research, bringing together science, history, and story in paired form.
In Logos, the author explores the threshold between myth and reason, following humanity from Neolithic villages into the rise of empires. Through both scholarship and narrative, he gives voice to perspectives often marginalized in traditional histories, centering the fragile, the mythic, and the feminine as guiding threads through the labyrinth of time.