Skip to main content
book cover for The Chronicles of Kaimakla

The Chronicles of Kaimakla

After the Cataclysm – The Age of Fireballs From The Oceans

You must sign in to see if this title is available for request. Sign In or Register Now

Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 28 Apr 2025 | Archive Date 24 Jul 2025

Talking about this book? Use #TheChroniclesofKaimakla #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!


Description

The climate apocalypse predicted by today's scientists has finally come to pass. The Eurasian landmass has become one vast desert scorched by ferocious heat. Most of humanity has been obliterated by the ferocity of heat, rising oceans and storms of unimaginable force. All knowledge of today’s science and technology and of our civilisation has been lost.

Amanaar and Mayzaar, who live in the underground city of Kaimakla, discover that the oasis on which the city depends is drying up, and that they will all die soon from thirst and starvation. As a desperate measure, Amanaar organises a journey to cross the vast desert to their north in search of a safe haven. On their journey they face many terrors, but also stumble upon objects from today’s world which are incomprehensible to them. They meet Stinna who passionately believes in the truth of the legends of great cities and a vanished hugely advanced technological civilisation. Stinna persuades the two men to join her in the search for the truth and for an explanation of what happened. This is their story.

The climate apocalypse predicted by today's scientists has finally come to pass. The Eurasian landmass has become one vast desert scorched by ferocious heat. Most of humanity has been obliterated by...


A Note From the Publisher

Ravi Tennekoon is passionately interested in the consequences of climate change. A lawyer and former professor at King’s College London, he was selected by the prestigious Chambers Directory as one of the leading lawyers in his field. He is the author of a major textbook, The Law and Regulation of International Finance. He was a lecturer and tutor in laws at Trinity College, Oxford, after reading law on a Rhodes Scholarship.

Ravi Tennekoon is passionately interested in the consequences of climate change. A lawyer and former professor at King’s College London, he was selected by the prestigious Chambers Directory as one...


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781836288398
PRICE £4.99 (GBP)
PAGES 368

Available on NetGalley

NetGalley Reader (EPUB)
NetGalley Shelf App (EPUB)
Send to Kindle (EPUB)
Send to Kobo (EPUB)
Download (EPUB)

Average rating from 2 members


Featured Reviews

I’m a big fan of dystopian fiction and picked this one up quickly when I saw it on NetGalley UK
This novel follows a young man living in an underground desert community as he journeys to discover other human settlements. A dystopian event called the Great cataclysm has occurred the cause of which isn’t really detailed in the novel but the inference is that there’s a huge climate emergency which is caused massive increasing temperatures in southern countries raised sea levels and a big change to the world map as we know it because of flooding a few areas in the northern hemisphere.
At the start of the story, we had that the Oasis responsible for water to maintain the underground. Community is drying out and the narrator Amonaar must journey with his camels across the great desert to look for fabled lands in the north which might be potential future sites for settlements.
The novel is essentially a journey based story as we follow Alana’s on his migration.
The great catechism has resulted in loss of education and technologies so that all the groups that we discover are leading a Stone Age style life largely subsistence farming or hunting
During the journey, the sections I most enjoyed were when they found evidence of “ancient civilisation “in the form of wrecked submarines bombs and aeroplanes evidence of our 21st century technology I would’ve liked more of these sections
The journey itself seem sto go rather on and on the end feels rushed and rather unsatisfactory

Whilst I read I’m a bit confused by the footnotes which describe where the future countries are in relation to our current world. Whilst this is interesting it’s inferring a level of knowledge about the past (our present) which the story itself suggests is not there . The footnotes for example describe the areas that you meet in terms of the 20th century world map this is explained right at the end of the novel however.
There’s a degree of magical reality towards the last section as a novel when it becomes clear that the author of the novel has the ability to live and extended life time. This does open the opportunity for future novels in this storyline.
I read a copy of the novel on NetGalley UK in return for an unbiased review. The book was published in the UK on the 28th of April 2025 by Troubadour
This review will appear on that Gully UK, StoryGraph, Goodreads, and my book blog bionicSarahSbooks.wordpress.com
It will also appear on Amazon, UK and Waterstones

Was this review helpful?

The Chronicles of Kaimakla is a tale about the world after a nuclear war. It takes place far in the future and paints a bleak future for mankind. I enjoyed the book.

Was this review helpful?