Timaeus by Plato
About The Author
Amethyst Gray
Amethyst Gray was born on the Isle of Wight, England and grew up close to Carisbrooke Castle. The Island, Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World on TV, fossils on the beach and crystals gave her a keen interest in history, hidden history and how everything came about. She was always good at Mathematics, so ended up taking a Physics degree at the University of London. That led to a career in IT before rediscovering her interest in crystals, alternative history and energy healing after moving to Wiltshire in the early 2010s.
Now as well as being accomplished in IT, Amethyst teaches Angelic Reiki, practices Access Bars, Future Life Progression and Past-Life Regression in the vicinity of Avebury stone circle.
She has given lectures on Atlantis and is in the process of publishing her Diana Garry book series
The Diana Garry Book Series
Diana Garry is a doctor of Archaeology at Bath Sulis University in the south-west of England.
In her 30’s, she has long given up on the idea of romance in her life. She has one passion and that is her Archaeology. Diana has specialities in the Phoenicians, Celts and Romans.
The world is a straightforward and straightforward place, as is its history. Everybody knows and accepts that. Modern history started with the adoption of agriculture in around 9000 BCE in the fertile crescent around the middle east that today includes northern Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Syria and Iraq. The ancient Sumerians, Babylonians, Assyrians, Egyptians, and Phoenicians were all responsible for the development of civilisation as we know it.
People and events can be categorised as religious and irrational or logical and scientific. Everything can be explained by science. Or so she thought.
In the Diana Garry book series, we follow Diana as her rigid belief systems are challenged in every possible way.
The Huntress
In ‘The Huntress’ Diana must confront her belief that reincarnation is a new-age idea gleaned from the far east without any basis on truth. She will glimpse the past, but not in an era that she is comfortable with. And her relationships in her own life go in an unexpected, but welcome direction.
The Priestess
In ‘The Priestess’ a more mature and happier Diana is brought in on a dig that always had the possibility of challenging Columbus or the Vikings as the first visitors to the Americas from the Old World. But its ultimate conclusions – about Atlanatis - could challenge her more fundamental tenets. Will Diana get through this in one piece?
The Heiress
In ‘The Heiress’ a simple rescue dig finds a more relaxed and open-minded Diana once more challenged by the history she knows and loves compared with the evidence and visions she sees in front of her.
The Priestess Page 14