About The Second Coming: 2030
The Second Coming: 2030
A Prophetic Thriller for an Age of Collapse
With a foreword by Unoma Azuah
What happens when power meets prophecy in a world ruled by machines?
The year is 2030. The earth is dying—choked by profit, paralyzed by politics, and governed by algorithms too complex to question. And then, without warning, a man appears.
He is seen—simultaneously—in refugee camps, war rooms, slums, boardrooms, and broadcast towers. Untraceable. Uncontainable.
He speaks not with weapons, but with words that destabilize nations.
He walks not in robes, but in dust-covered sandals.
And to the most powerful people on earth, he delivers a choice:
Bow to the system.
Or break it wide open.
The Second Coming: 2030 is not just a novel. It is a mirror held to our age—part political thriller, part sacred provocation. With echoes of Orwell, scripture, and sci-fi, it dares to ask: What would truly happen if the world’s most dangerous revolutionary returned—this time, in the middle of a livestream?
For readers of Yuval Noah Harari, Margaret Atwood, and anyone who still believes a single voice can shake an empire.
This book is not safe.
It will be loved.
It will be hated.
But it will not be forgotten.
Buy the book, and follow the author on social media:
Learn more about the writer. Visit the Author’s Website.
Author Bio:
Success Akpojotor doesn’t just write stories—he breaks open the silences we carry. Whether it’s the ache of a broken relationship, the tension of a political scandal, or the weight of a system built to fail us, his words meet you where you are and leave you different.
He’s the author of 4 Hours, a raw, emotionally charged novel that unfolds in real time, capturing a tense journey between divorced exes on the road from Benin to Lagos—with a child between them, and more than just distance to navigate. His other works dive deep into AI corruption, global power struggles, and the psychological cost of survival, blending personal pain with the world’s chaos.
Success writes for readers who want more than an escape.
For those who want to feel, to question, to remember.
Named an ambassador for peace by Fundación César Egido Serrano and a screenplay finalist at international conferences, his stories reflect his roots in Benin City, his battles with faith, loss, and ambition, and his belief that stories can heal as much as they provoke.
When he’s not writing, he’s probably lifting weights, teaching history, or getting lost in Asake’s beats, plotting the next chapter that might just wreck you.
If you’re ready for books that pull no punches but leave space for hope,
follow him here—and step into the stories that stay with you long after the last page.