Science Fiction

Reliquary of the Dead has won top place at the Halloween Book Festival.

Halloween Book Festival

LOS ANGELES _ Reliquary of the Dead takes top honors at the 2025 Halloween Book Festival.

Reliquary of the Dead was chosen as the best book of the festival. The book was competing against children’s books, young adult, unconventional romance, general fiction, non-fiction, biographies, and horror. Horror and spooky-themed books normally win Halloween book festivals, so this is an incredible achievement.

Here is the official announcement: Halloween Book Festival

We want to again thank all our fans and readers who have made this a success and encouraged us along the way.

And if you haven’t read Reliquary of the Dead yet, and if you like fast-paced books that blend science-fiction, archaeology, and ancient myth, consider buying my novels on Amazon (War of the Gods ) and other leading book retailers. And if you like my books, please leave a review.

Science Fiction

Reliquary of the Dead just took 2nd and 3rd place in Fall 2025’s The BookFest® Awards

The Bookfest Awards

Reliquary of the Dead has won a couple of awards in Fall 2025’s The BookFest® awards. The book received 2nd place in the category of Christian Futuristic Fiction and 3rd place in the category of Science Fiction-Space Exploration.

The BookFest® is a secular book contest, even though it has a category for Christian fiction. Together we are making a cultural impact through edifying story-telling based upon a Christian worldview. A nation’s morality is determined by the stories that are told and the media that is consumed. Moral fiction can still make an impact, so this is important work. And we couldn’t have done this without you, our loyal readers!

Here is the official announcement. The Bookfest Awards Announcement

If you like fast-paced, well-written books that blend science-fiction, archaeology, and ancient myth, consider buying my novel Reliquary of the Dead, now on sale at Amazon ( Buy Reliquary of the Dead here ) and other leading book retailers. And if you like the book, please leave a review.

Science Fiction

Reliquary of the Dead has been nominated for the 2025 Outstanding Creator Awards

We are proud to announce that Reliquary of the Dead has been nominated for the 2025 Outstanding Creator Awards. Here is the review of the book from the editors of the contest.

Review of “Reliquary of the Dead” by David Falk

9/30/2025

Score: 94/100 (9.4 out of 10)

It’s Indiana Jones meets Prometheus!

Reliquary of the Dead by David Falk takes place in the 25th century and follows Dr. Pierre Gulet, an archaeologist pulled into an accelerated colonist program and shipped to the exoplanet Gliese 832 c, being told that there is a “problem with the planet.” Pierre is brilliant and stubborn. He quickly becomes the colony’s reluctant problem-solver.

Strangely enough, Pierre’s specialty is in prophetic utterances carved into Egyptian Middle Kingdom burials. This brings up one of the biggest questions of the book: for what reason is Pierre (of all people) being recruited on this futuristic space mission? What need would a futuristic space society have for someone with this archaic specialty?

However, Pierre’s background does prove vital when he and medic Alicia Stripes uncover a god-machine, the titular Reliquary, beneath Gliese’s sands. As Arish’s food fails and scatterbugs go missing, rival commander Terry Brandt makes his move and the orbiting MegaAI abandons them, forcing Pierre to weaponize the relic’s toxic breath to save the colony and setting the stage for a larger war featuring primordial gods.

One of the most fascinating aspects of this novel is the world-building. You really get a sense of how alien and different the time and setting(s) of this book are. Let’s set the stage. In the 2400s, a total of four World Wars have been fought. Each of them, as you might imagine, brought about dramatic change. World War III brought about the banning of nuclear weapons. World War IV banned androids and cybernetic augmentation outright. The Armistice didn’t just end a war, it reset civilization’s ethics and priorities.

By Pierre’s day, humanity has planted flags on 48 worlds, with orbital MegaAIs coordinating traffic, research, and scarce resources. Colonists are drafted through accelerated programs with strict social contracts, pair up and try to breed for children (“make a good faith effort”) or face exile. Out on Gliese 832 c, the air and dust try to kill you, scatterbug swarms struggle to terraform, and people live by lithium hydroxide rebreathers, ration cards, and “insta-caff” (which is kind of like coffee, but a lot less tasty and enjoyable). It feels both futuristic and feral: frontier hamlets under alien skies, governed as much by austerity and myth as by code and policy, until a primordial Reliquary under the sand wakes up and proves the oldest technology in the system isn’t human at all.

This book explores how many aspects of humanity never change regardless of technological advancements. In a sense, we’re just like cavemen with business suits and suitcases now. Even in the 2400s, there are still corrupt and power hungry people like Terry; there are still fanatical, cult-like groups of people, and people still need their caffeine (whether it’s palatable or not).

This book has a lot going for it. We will say that it seems to place an inordinate amount of focus on scatterbugs, the terraforming critters. Yes, they’re cool, cute (sometimes), and somewhat integral to the plot, but did we have to read about them constantly.

Pierre even adopts one as a pet and names it Maat.

It seems like every other page had to have something about the scatterbugs doing one thing or another. We almost felt like this book might as well have just been about the scatterbugs, starring the scatterbugs as the main characters. Cause, why not? They’re everywhere anyway!

The good news: once the Reliquary thread heats up, the book absolutely snaps into focus. Stakes spike. The colony politics tighten. Pierre and Alicia’s steady, brain-and-heart partnership shines. Terry’s ambition curdles into something dangerous. And the survival scenes—hazmat scrambles, ration worries, suit patches, desperate gambits—hit hard. By the final act, it’s tense, clever, and memorable, with imagery you won’t forget.

Check it out on Amazon!