The Other-world Collection books in order

The Other-world Collection is K.M. Ashman's departure from historical fiction, gathering science fiction, horror, and dystopian novels — from post-apocalyptic survival to vampire mythology — into a single series that showcases a different range of his writing. The five books span 2011 to 2021.

Reading order

# Title Published Author Buy on Amazon
1 The Last Citadel 2011 K.M. Ashman Buy
2 Savage Eden 2011 K.M. Ashman Buy
3 Vampire 2012 K.M. Ashman Buy
4 The Legacy Protocol 2020 K.M. Ashman Buy
5 The Seventh God 2021 K.M. Ashman Buy

The Other-world Collection sits apart from K.M. Ashman’s main historical fiction output, gathering the speculative and genre fiction he has written alongside his Roman, medieval, and Crusader series. The five books — published between 2011 and 2021 — move through post-apocalyptic survival, horror, science fiction, and supernatural fiction, reflecting the breadth of a writer who came to historical fiction as a reader of many genres.

The books are not connected to each other by characters or plot; they are individual novels gathered under a collective label. For readers primarily interested in Ashman’s historical work, the Other-world Collection is a side note. For readers who want to see what he does when unconstrained by period and research, it is an interesting counterpoint to the discipline of his main series.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many books are in the The Other-world Collection series?

There are five books in the The Other-world Collection series, published between 2011 and 2021.

What is the first book in the The Other-world Collection series?

The first book in the The Other-world Collection series is The Last Citadel, published in 2011.

What kinds of stories are in the Other-world Collection?

The collection ranges across several speculative genres. The Last Citadel and Savage Eden are post-apocalyptic survival novels. Vampire is exactly what it sounds like — a horror novel built around vampire mythology. The Legacy Protocol moves into science fiction territory. The Seventh God adds a supernatural or mythological dimension. The books share a willingness to leave historical Britain behind and explore darker speculative territory, but they are otherwise distinct works rather than a connected series with ongoing characters.

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