A Recovered Account of the Last Human Record is a speculative non-fiction-styled science-fiction work presented as a recovered archival document from the end of human civilization.
Written in a clinical, report-like voice, the ebook reconstructs humanity's final era through fragments of logs, analyses, testimony, and reconstructed records. It explores the collapse of modern society under the weight of advanced technology, artificial intelligence, environmental degradation, surveillance systems, and institutional failure. Rather than following a single protagonist, the narrative treats humanity itself as the subject-examined the way a future intelligence or unknown archivist might study a lost species.
The book blends philosophical inquiry with unsettling realism, asking how progress becomes self-destructive, how memory is preserved after extinction, and whether consciousness, culture, or identity can survive beyond biological humanity. Its tone is eerie, methodical, and reflective, creating a slow-burn sense of dread as the reader pieces together what went wrong-and why no one stopped it.
Designed to read like a classified dossier or post-human historical record, the ebook sits at the intersection of science fiction, futurism, and existential horror, offering a chilling meditation on legacy, accountability, and the final footprint of the human race.