Winner of the Claymore award
“Hulen’s complex mystery offers multiple twists and turns. An imaginative and engaging Mexico-set thriller.” —Kirkus Reviews
Winner of the Claymore Award
“An imaginative and engaging Mexico-set thriller.”—Kirkus Reviews
Book One – MISPLACED
What if the opportunity to rewrite history was standing right in front of you?
In 2181 BC, Khara, daughter of Pepy II, stands on the brink of becoming Egypt’s first woman pharaoh—until betrayal shatters her world, forcing her into exile through time itself. Cast into the vast deserts between the U.S. and Mexico, Khara believes she’s fallen into the underworld—until she meets Victoria Barrón, a modern-day attorney with a guarded heart and an unflagging sense of purpose.
Their quest take them through cursed lands, forgotten legends, and the shadowy edges of history—testing the strength of friendship, the weight of destiny, and the cost of sacrifice. As an eclipse opens a portal back to Khara’s time, the questions lingers: Can the past be saved with losing the future?
Book One – MISPLACED
What if the opportunity to rewrite history was standing right in front of you?
In 2181 BC, Khara, daughter of Pepy II, stands on the brink of becoming Egypt’s first woman pharaoh—until betrayal shatters her world, forcing her into exile through time itself. Cast into the vast deserts between the U.S. and Mexico, Khara believes she’s fallen into the underworld—until she meets Victoria Barrón, a modern-day attorney with a guarded heart and an unflagging sense of purpose.
Their quest take them through cursed lands, forgotten legends, and the shadowy edges of history—testing the strength of friendship, the weight of destiny, and the cost of sacrifice. As an eclipse opens a portal back to Khara’s time, the questions lingers: Can the past be saved with losing the future?
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S.L. Hulen
The S. is for Sylvia.
Growing up in El Paso, a city where history, myth, and cultural intrigue blur into everyday life, shaped me early—its desert light, its layered past, its whispers of stories beneath the surface…
Unearthed
The Cautionary Legacy of Aleš Hrdlička.
Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons In the early twentieth century, few figures loomed larger over American anthropology than Aleš Hrdlička. (I admit, I’m still working on the pronunciation). As curator of physical anthropology at the Smithsonian Institution,...
The Exciting Challenge to Mainstream Archaeology
For much of the twentieth century, archaeology in North America operated within a reassuringly narrow window. The prevailing view held that humans arrived near the end of the last Ice Age, roughly 13,000 years ago, spreading rapidly across the continent once...

