✦ ANCIENT ✦
☽ LIBRARY ☾


Welcome to
The Library of the Cosmos!
A collection of texts and recordings gathered from the depths of the dunes to the farthest reaches of the cosmos.

Within these shelves lie fractured myths, haunted field notes, and the forgotten works of those who wandered too far. Some are etched in bone, others whispered through static

Enter quietly, and make sure not to get too lost.


Traditional Folklore Vol. I - XIII
by Unknown

Beneath its golden hills and wind-swept fields lie stories older than roads, older than names. Some whisper of The Watcher, an eye fixed in the stars, while others speak of forgotten rituals, haunted farmsteads, and objects no one should ever find. The Traditional Folklore series gathers the region’s most unsettling legends, half-remembered superstitions, and truths that were never meant to be written down.

Whether you're searching for local history or something more unearthly, one warning remains:

Some stories don’t want to stay buried.

Read with care.

The Wayfarer - Complete Series
by Soren Wilder

The Bloom and the Blade

The Wayfarer falls in love with a girl who appears in his dreams each night, her skin dusted with pollen and her voice always saying goodbye. One day, he finds her growing from the center of a battlefield, a flower unlike any other, rooted in the ribcage of an ancient titan. The Wayfarer is told if he cuts the bloom, she will live, but he must never ask her who she was before.

The Valley of Always

The Wayfarer journeys to a place only mentioned in lost epics, a valley said to exist outside of time, where all things that were loved too fiercely are stored. He hopes to retrieve what he lost, but when he arrives, he finds a field of unmoving figures, statues carved of wind and memory, all frozen mid-smile.

Dive Into the Dunes

The Wayfarer, on the search for his lost flower, comes across a stranger who offers him a cosmic deal - trade something unknown for a map that takes you to whatever you want wherever you want. Desperate for the flower, he makes the deal, and marks a deadly journey into the endless dunes, with only one way to complete The Vein Atlas.

Stranded at Sea Compendium
by Thaddeus Blackthorne

Lost at sea? Adrift beneath unfamiliar stars? This is the book mariners pass down in hushed tones. a sailor’s final safeguard when maps fail and the water begins to whisper back.

Compiled by the elusive Thaddeus Blackthorne, this compendium blends field notes, sailor folklore, and cryptic warnings from voyages that never returned. Inside are signs to watch for, silences to flee from, and voices you must never answer, no matter how familiar they sound.

Part survival guide, part confession, part curse, the Stranded at Sea Compendium has saved lives.
It may have also doomed them.

The Constellation Code
by Maren Voss

Written by field researcher and skeptic Dr. Maren Voss, these ten volumes dissect the myths surrounding the constellations: The Keeper, The Blur, The Antlered Choir, The Siren, The Grey, The Hollow Mother, The Veil, The Gate, The Watcher, and The Thief. Voss maps the line where folklore meets data, where star patterns correlate with disappearances, signal disruptions, and impossible weather.

She began the series after her closest friend vanished beyond the northern ridgeline, during what officials called a "celestial proximity event." Some say it was aliens. Voss doesn't believe that.

She believes it was worse.

Part research archive, part ritual dissection, part unraveling journal, The Constellation Code was written to explain the stars.
It may only illuminate how little we ever understood.

The Cosmic Messages - Deciphered
by Elias Thorne

Before the rituals, before the constellations were feared by name, there was only a machine and a question: What if the stars were speaking?

This book is not myth, but blueprint. A full documentation of the earliest transmissions ever received through the prototype StarDuster unit, a handmade device built by Elias Thorne in isolation, tuned not to voices, but to intentions buried in light.

Each message is presented in its raw form alongside Thorne’s original handwritten translations. Some are incomplete. Others repeat phrases no language has ever claimed. A few were crossed out in red ink.

Though praised at the time as a breakthrough in astrophysics, these pages now read like a slow confession. Not every message came from something we should have answered.

And not all of them have stopped.

READ ME TELL ME YOUR NAME READ ME ARE YOU STILL THERE? READ ME WHISPER IT I KNOW YOU READ ME

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