This one’s got brains, bullets, and blasphemy—and I devoured it like a heretical snack. Don’t start unless you’re ready to binge-read and question the universe before breakfast. Would sell my last coffee for a sequel.
Authors,  Book Reviews,  Dystopian,  Post Apocalyptic

Robin’s Review of The Kuffar Project

Title: The Kuffar Project

Author:  Lee Burvine

Published: December 27, 2016

Genres: Metaphysical Science Fiction, Technothrillers

Pages:  366

Source: Kindle, Paperback

The Kuffar Project

Astronomer and TV science communicator Gevin Rees just landed the interview of a lifetime with the world’s most celebrated physicist. Remarkable, because the eccentric genius is notoriously reclusive. And he’s already dead.

Rees soon finds himself catapulted into a deadly conspiracy that spans archeology, cutting-edge physics, and the highest levels of government secrecy. He joins forces with rogue DCIS agent Kerry Morgan as assassins and shadowy world powers close in, desperate to bury what the pair are uncovering…

Mind-blowing technology and solid evidence that would rewrite religious history and challenge the faith of billions.

This one’s got brains, bullets, and blasphemy—and I devoured it like a heretical snack. Don’t start unless you’re ready to binge-read and question the universe before breakfast. Would sell my last coffee for a sequel.

What Did I Just Walk Into?

Imagine if Carl Sagan and Jason Bourne got stuck in a conspiracy theory forum with a physics textbook and a very personal grudge against organized religion. That’s The Kuffar Project. Also, something explodes. Frequently.

This book doesn’t ease into things. It hits the gas by page 5 and never stops swerving. Secret tech? Check. Rogue agents? You bet. Deep philosophical questions about the origins of belief and time itself? Oh yeah—sprinkled in between car chases and shocking disappearances through floors.

Here’s What Slapped:

Science that doesn’t insult your intelligence. Somehow, we’re time-bending and existential-crisis-ing without drowning in jargon.

A main character with brain cells AND nerve. Finally.

Actual plot twists. Not the kind you see coming a mile away—these hit like a wrench to the cerebral cortex.

That ending? I’m still unwell. In the best possible way.

What Could’ve Been Better:

Look, some of the escapes are technically ridiculous. But honestly? So is the concept of Wi-Fi and we all still use that. Suspend disbelief, grab a drink, and enjoy the ride.

Perfect for Readers Who Love:

📖 The Da Vinci Code but wish it had more particle physics

📖 Fiction that stomps on sacred cows while citing academic sources

📖 Rogue science communicators with just enough action-hero energy

📖 Books that keep you awake at 2 a.m. with your eyebrows raised and your brain screaming “wait, what if that’s real?”

Reviewed by Kenan for Robin’s Review

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