9.3/10

In the heat of the Syrian desert, where the sun bakes the dunes into glass‑like dunes and the wind sings through the ancient ruins, a lone scholar named Leila follows a thread of whispered legends that have survived for millennia. The story she uncovers is the tale of the “Livre Perdu du Dieu Enki” – the Lost Book of Enki, the Sumerian god of water, wisdom, and creation. Leila’s journey begins in the dusty archives of the Musée du Levant in Beirut. An elderly curator, Fatima, slides a weather‑worn clay tablet across the table and says, “It’s not a map, my child. It’s a riddle. Enki left his teachings in a book that never saw the light of day.” The tablet bears a simple drawing: a stylized fish swimming through a river that splits into three tributaries, each ending in a different symbol – a star, a reed, and a lion.