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About
What if the centuries between life and death were missing… and you were the proof?
Joseph William Horne was born in Devonshire in 1739, the son of a country surgeon, educated in the brutal realities of eighteenth‑century medicine and the unforgiving logic of the Enlightenment. His life should be known only to parish records and fading archives.
Instead, he is found alive in 1952.
As Joseph recounts his youth, his voice carries the texture of another age: the smells of the anatomy theatre, the peril of Atlantic crossings, the rigid hierarchies of shipboard life, and the moral certainties—and brutal contradictions—of the Georgian world. His journey takes him from England’s medical colleges to the chaos of the New World, through piracy, captivity, religious fanaticism, and a world governed by rules no European chart ever recorded.
Rendered in meticulous historical detail, The Missing Centuries of Joseph Horne reads as an authentic eighteenth‑century memoir—until history itself begins to fracture.
Framed by post‑war psychiatrists attempting to explain the impossible, Joseph’s testimony raises a disturbing question: can a man’s lived experience outweigh the official record of history?
Sweeping, immersive, and richly textured, this is a novel for readers who love deeply researched historical fiction—but are willing to follow it one step beyond the edge of the known world.