

“This book stayed with me long after I finished it.”
The world has already ended. What remains is the last city on Earth—an overcrowded, starving metropolis carved into hostile quarters, held together by fear, and slowly suffocating under the weight of ancient hatreds.
The story is told through the eyes of a man who should not have survived it.
Once a policeman. Now a nameless thief. Brain-damaged, broken, and barely clinging to memory, he survives by staying invisible—until the government captures the leader of a fragile resistance movement and hires him to do the impossible.
Rescue her.
It is a suicide mission. He knows it. Everyone does. But some jobs cannot be refused, even when success raises a worse question:
If you escape… where do you go when there is nowhere left to run?
As the city collapses into violence and systematic ethnic cleansing, the thief is forced to confront a truth he has spent years trying to forget—about the future, about the city, and about himself.
Readers have described Angel of the City as “a gritty, grim dystopian thriller with well-fleshed-out characters, solid action, and a disturbingly plausible world.” Its twists are sharp, its perspective deeply human, and its ending uncompromising.
This is not a comfortable book.
It is a story of survival, memory, and fragile hope in a world that has already chosen its ending.