About the Book
When a Stanford post-doctoral molecular biologist plummets to his death over Devil's Slide at Half Moon Bay, Jon Hunt, his surviving roommate, doubts the official suicide story, recalling his roommate's radical personality changes after returning from a trip to England. Suspecting mind control and things darker, Jon journeys to the Negev, London, Cambridge, and New Forest, England, where he starts to see a terrible pattern. Return of the Giants is a horror-novel-cum-thriller that crosses exotic and at times heavy terrain, from intrigue at Bohemian Grove, the hidden refuge of presidents and billionaires (based on credible reports), to underground scientific projects at Stanford and Cambridge, to the shrouded New Forest region of England, where the terrifying Nephilim are kept from view in a massive facility. (The Nephilim are ancient giants that were destroyed in the Great Flood, and endless speculation has surrounded their terrible powers. We peer into these and other mysteries in a world of the near-future--a feast for those able to read between the lines.)
Author Robert T. Brooke sojourned through the dark side of the occult much of his life before finding a doorway of hope and what he calls the answer to the problem of evil. The story is based on an IMAX-level dream the author had of a horrifying, clandestine recombinant DNA scientific experiment. When the Nephilim came into view, towering into the sky (and, indeed, chronicled in the ancient world), he broke into a cold sweat ("I am hard to scare"). At that point the author was afraid he was being shown something. At first he resisted, but then began writing.
The actual writing of the novel began in an old Edwardian Colonial hotel in Colombo, Sri Lanka, where the author stayed for months. After numerous rewrites spanning seven years, from Berkeley to Coromandel, New Zealand (where he has a residence), the novel was completed. Robert T. Brooke is a conservative libertarian who has a very sobered view of insider manipulation and the West's downward course, where trusting people are being betrayed by their leaders for an agenda utterly alien to their interests.
The author writes at a very high level, creating a fast-paced read that is ideal for plane or train, as new findings crop up at unexpected turns. English travel-writer and journalist John Hills said: "Ragingly brilliant, riveting. Couldn't put it down. On the level of the best of Dean Koontz spliced with vintage Michael Crichton. Remarkable intrigue, depth and range." Hills, publisher & founder of "Maui Gold Magazine," "Maui INC Magazine" and "Centerpiece Magazine," adds that should Return of the Giants fall into the hands of a visionary director of Peter Jackson's caliber, it could easily become a blockbuster movie, especially given recent leaps in special effects.
About the Author: Robert T. Brooke has sojourned through the dark side of the occult much of his life before finding what he calls the answer to the problem of evil, finding a doorway of hope. Writing with rare insight, he is the son of a high ranking American diplomat, having grown up all over the world, including ten years in England, four and a half years in the middle east, three in India, three in Europe, back to two early childhood years in Port-au-Prince, Haiti where his father, in his days before becoming a diplomat, was part of a literary community surrounding English author, Malcolm Lowry (writing Under the Volcano). A graduate of the University of Virginia and Princeton, Robert T. Brooke began writing Return of the Giants over a seven year period, starting in an old Colonial hotel in Sri Lanka (formerly the British Governor's estate in Mount Lavinia, Columbo when it was Ceylon), finishing it in Coromandel, New Zealand, where he has a residence (http: //www.holidayhouses.co.nz/properties/6527.asp). The author splits credits for the book between Berkeley, California and Coromandel, New Zealand, where the majority of the writing was done. He is a conservative libertarian with a very sober view of insider manipulation and the West's downward course where trusting people are being betrayed. The story is based on an IMAX-level dream the author had of a horrifying recombinant DNA stealth scientific project in the forests of England. When the terrible Nephilim came into view, towering into the sky (and, indeed, chronicled in the ancient world), he broke into a cold sweat ("I am hard to scare"). At that point the author was afraid he was being shown something, and at first resisted, then began writing.