About The Serpent’s Heart
In 1994, a brilliant Mexican neurophysiologist vanished from his laboratory without a trace. The official story claimed it was a crime of passion. Conspiracy theories whispered he had found a glitch in the Matrix.
Thirty years later, physicist Elías Navarro finds a ghost in the machine. During a failed quantum consciousness experiment in Arizona, he captures a signal that shouldn’t exist: a rhythmic pulse hidden within the fabric of space-time.
At the same time, anthropologist Ixchel Iturriaga makes a discovery beneath the ancient pyramids of Teotihuacán that destroys her career: the structures weren’t just temples. They were machines. And they are waking up.
United by a shadowy benefactor and hunted by Omnia—a global organization dedicated to suppressing dangerous truths—Elías and Ixchel must race against the clock, from the frozen peaks of the Himalayas to the subterranean cenotes of the Maya underworld.
They seek the final piece of a scientific work lost decades ago. But what they find isn’t just a technological breakthrough. It is a warning.
There is a reason humanity has lived in the dark. A prison was built eons ago to contain a cosmic threat, and the key to opening it resides in the frequency of the human mind.
Elías and Ixchel are about to turn the key.
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Author Bio:
Uzuel Guillen is a Mexican author who writes for those who suspect the world is far more than what meets the eye. As an independent researcher and storyteller based in Mexico, his work explores the outer limits of human potential, blending cutting-edge technology with the ancient mysticism of his homeland.
He grew up surrounded by books thanks to his father’s influence and learned from his mother that a well-told story has the power to transform perception. This heritage culminates in his debut novel, The Heart of the Serpent (El Corazón de la Serpiente), a journey that weaves the real-life mystery of Dr. Jacobo Grinberg with quantum physics, inviting the reader to question the very nature of reality.
He lives with his wife, Alexandra, and their children, who serve as his constant reminder that human connection is the only true magic. He firmly believes that writing is not just about inventing new worlds, but about remembering forgotten truths.
