
Olga Romanoff
The year is 1894, and a shadow falls across the world. A brotherhood of anarchists, led by the enigmatic Olga Romanoff, has achieved what no nation could: total air superiority through a fleet of devastating airships. What begins as a revolutionary crusade to reshape civilization spirals into something far darker, a clash of ideals that culminates in an apocalyptic reckoning when a comet hurtles toward Earth. This sequel to The Angel of the Revolution picks up the thread of Griffith's visionary and controversial anarchist utopia, where old empires crumble and new orders rise from the wreckage. Olga herself is a figure of dangerous charisma, part revolutionary, part terrorist, part prophet. Griffith's prescient imagination foreshadows aerial warfare, weaponized terror, and the fragility of civilization. The novel reads like a Victorian thriller crossed with apocalyptic scripture, a thrilling, uncomfortable vision of a world remade by violence.






